Johns Hopkins School of Nursing
Motto | Vigilando (Latin) |
---|---|
Motto in English | Forever Watchful[1] |
Type | Private nursing school |
Established | 1889 |
Parent institution | Johns Hopkins University |
Dean | Sarah Szanton[2] |
Academic staff | 230 (80 full-time, 150 part-time)[3] |
Students | 1075 (2014)[3] |
Location | , , United States |
Campus | Urban |
Website | nursing |
The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing is the nursing school of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Established in 1889, it is one of the nation's oldest schools for nursing education. It is continuously rated as the top nursing program in the US per U.S. News & World Report.
Origins
[edit]The founder Johns Hopkins' desire for a training school for female nurses was formally stated in a posthumous 1873 instruction letter to the board of trustees of the Johns Hopkins institutions. The School of Nursing in conjunction with the Johns Hopkins Hospital was eventually founded in 1889 after in depth consultation with Florence Nightingale on its planning, organization, structure and curriculum.[4]
Location
[edit]The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing is located on the Johns Hopkins University East Baltimore campus along with the Bloomberg School of Public Health, School of Medicine, and the Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Academics
[edit]The School of Nursing offers a variety of programs from pre-licensure programs to Master's, DNP and PhD programs, online options, post-degree opportunities, and nursing prerequisites.[5]
Research centers
[edit]The school has four research centers (Center for Innovative Care in Aging, Center for Nursing Research and Sponsored Projects, Center for Collaborative Intervention Research and the Center on Health Disparities Research)[6] and also offers Interdisciplinary Fellowship research on violence, pain, and health disparities in underserved populations, as well as research focused on cardiovascular health prevention and risk reduction, care at end of life, community-based health promotion, health disparities, interpersonal violence, maternal-child health, psychoneuroimmunology, and symptom management areas.[3] The school is also home to the country's first and only Peace Corps Fellows Program in nursing.[7][8][9] The school offers a special program for Arts and Science College students to transfer after two years.[10]
Notable alumni
[edit]- Vashti Bartlett, Red Cross nurse during World War I, and in Vladivostok, Manchuria, and Haiti
- Alice Fitzgerald, Director of the Nursing Bureau, League of Red Cross Societies, Geneva
- Elizabeth Gordon Fox, Director of the Bureau of Public Nursing, American Red Cross
- Sara Virginia Ecker Watts Morrison, nurse and First Lady of North Carolina
- Mary Adelaide Nutting (World's first professor of nursing)
- Isabel Hampton Robb (Founder of modern American nursing theory and one of the most important leaders in the history of nursing, first Dean of the School)
- Elizabeth Lawrie Smellie (First woman Colonel of the Canadian army and Matron-in-chief of the Canadian Army Medical Corps)
- Ernestine Wiedenbach (Major nursing theorist in maternity and clinical nursing)
References
[edit]- ^ "Symbols | Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing". Nursing.jhu.edu. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- ^ "Sarah Szanton named Johns Hopkins School of Nursing dean". Johns Hopkins University. August 18, 2021. Retrieved October 21, 2021.
- ^ a b c "Facts and Figures".
- ^ History of the School of Nursing
- ^ "Academic Programs at Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing". Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ^ [1] Archived December 22, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Peace Corps Fellows Nursing Program Nearly Doubles". AScribe Medicine News Service. 2005-12-19.
- ^ Media-Newswire.com - Press Release Distribution (2008-08-22). "Press Release Distribution - PR Agency". Media-Newswire.com. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- ^ Peace Corps. "Johns Hopkins University – School of Nursing | Coverdell Fellows | Peace Corps". Peacecorps.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-03-08. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- ^ "Nursing". Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved 2010-11-27.
Further reading
[edit]- James, Janet Wilson. "Isabel Hampton and the Professionalization of Nursing in the 1890s," in Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg, eds. Therapeutic Revolution: Essays in the Social History of American Medicine (1979) pp 201–244
- Kaufman M et al. Dictionary of American medical biography. Greenwood Press, Westport CN, vol 2. Page 640.
- Ramos, Mary Carol. "The Johns Hopkins Training School For Nurses: A Tale Of Vision, Labor, And Futility," Nursing History Review (1997), Vol. 5, pp 23–48.