Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Resolve

Around the world there are so many ways to celebrate a new year – the Chinese New Year, the Persian New Year, the Arabic New Year, and the new year celebrated around the world on January 1.

In the midst of all the predictions and energy and glitter is a new way to celebrate: Resolution ’12. This web-based project, begun last year by the Rev. Charles L. Howard, Penn’s own university chaplain, encourages people to make New Year’s resolutions that are in the service of others.

“We were trying to experiment with how we could challenge people to put more good out there in the world,” Rev. Howard said.

I have added my resolution at www.resolution12.org, and I invite you to do the same. I encourage you to think in terms of community, of civic engagement, of global connections. As Pulitzer Prize-winner Ellen Goodman poignantly wrote:

“We spend January 1 walking through our lives, room by room, drawing up a list of work to be done, cracks to be patched. Maybe this year, to balance the list, we ought to walk through the rooms of our lives … not looking for flaws, but for potential.”

That potential could be in your resolution, or in mine, or in the resolve of someone we never have met. It could start with Resolution ’12.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Milestones

We at Penn Nursing are proud to share our 125th anniversary with another landmark nursing institution, the Visiting Nurse Association of Greater Philadelphia. Until its inception on March 2, 1886, “no one had ever heard of such a thing as nursing the sick poor [sic] except in hospitals,” recalled founder Mrs. William Furness Jenks. The work of visiting nurses was hard, often taking them to “run-down areas which housed the city’s workers” and where such contagions as typhoid, diphtheria, and tuberculosis were rampant.

The efforts of these pioneering women – indeed, all were women – and their visiting nurse counterparts around the country formed the foundation of home nursing and community nursing as we know them today.

The history of the VNA of Greater Philadelphia has its home here at Penn Nursing, in the premier center for nursing history in the world, the Barbara Bates Center for the Study of the History of Nursing. The Bates Center -- notably celebrating its 25th anniversary this year -- houses the records of the Visiting Nurse Society, and a vast collection of materials from nursing history.

The entire Bates collection – a rich array of written materials, artifacts, and photographs from nursing history -- encompasses nursing education and healthcare institutions, non-profits, and nursing luminaries. The Bates Center is open to scholars across all fields and non-academic researchers interested in nursing. It brings nursing history to life, and is a jewel of our School and our discipline. Happy anniversary to us all!