News Release: Public Health Nurse Leaders Program Selects 25 Participants
Two-Year Leadership Development Program Will Prepare Nurses to Support
the Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action and Help Advance a Culture of Health
NEWS RELEASE: July 22, 2015
Contact: Melissa Blair; 609-627-5937
Princeton, N.J. – The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) today announced the 25 nurses from 22 states who were selected to participate in its Public Health Nurse Leaders (PHNL) program. The two-year leadership development program is designed to strengthen the capacity of senior public health nurses to improve population health, address social determinants of health, respond to emerging trends in health and health care, influence policy, and lead collaboration in their communities.
The program’s goal is to support nurses who are ready to lead public health departments in building a Culture of Health in their communities. Since PHNLs participate in partnerships across all sectors and disciplines that lead to collaborative action, they can leverage new and existing opportunities for even healthier communities. As part of the Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action, the PHNLs will work closely with the Action Coalitions in their states to implement recommendations from the Institute of Medicine’s Future of Nursing report.
“At RWJF, we are working to build a Culture of Health that enables everyone in the United States to live the healthiest lives possible, supported by a system in which nurses are essential partners in providing care and promoting health,” said Susan Hassmiller, PhD, RN, FAAN, RWJF’s senior adviser for nursing and director of the Campaign for Action—a joint initiative of RWJF and AARP. “We are so proud of all 25 nurses accepted into this program and excited about the many ways they will strengthen their state Action Coalitions by bringing public health expertise to their work. Every one of the nurses in this program will help make their communities healthier and our health care system stronger.”
RWJF’s Public Health Nurse Leaders program was open to registered nurses who hold leadership positions in governmental public health organizations. Its goal is to help the PHNLs develop their leadership skills and connections with key influencers so they can build and spread a Culture of Health. Participating nurses will spend their first year focused on individual leadership development. Second-year activities are designed to enhance the leadership competencies and coaching skills of both the nurses in this program and key members of the Action Coalition in their respective states.
The Public Health Nurse Leaders selected for this program are:
- Jessica Hardy, RN, MPH, Office of Women’s Health Director, Alabama Department of Public Health, Montgomery, Ala.
- Tomi St. Mars, MSN, RN, CEN, FAEN, Chief, Office of Injury Prevention, Arizona Department of Health Services, Phoenix, Ariz.
- Patricia Scott, DNP, RN, PNP -BC, NCSN, Director, Center for Health Advancement, Arkansas Department of Health, Little Rock, Ark.
- Sherylin Taylor, PHN, Nursing Director, Lake County Public Health, Lakeport, Calif.
- Noel Bazini-Barakat, RN, MSN, MPH, Nursing Director, Department of Public Health, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Los Angeles, Calif.
- Diane Durrence, APRN, MSN, MPH, Deputy Chief Nurse for Nurse Protocols, Department of District and County Operations, Georgia Department of Public Health, Atlanta, Ga.
- Joan Takamori, APRN, Chief, Public Health Nursing Branch, Honolulu, Hawaii.
- Robin Hannon, RN, MSN, Director Personal Health, St. Clair County Health Department, Belleville, Ill.
- Karen Crimmings, RN, CIC, Chronic Disease Prevention & Health Promotion Service Manager, Cerro Gordo County Department of Public Health, Mason City, Iowa.
- Ivonne Rivera-Newberry, RN, BSN, Assistant Director, Reno County Health Department, Hutchinson, Kan.
- Clair Millet, DNP, APRN, PHCNS-BC, Director of Nursing, Louisiana Department of Health & Hospitals Office of Public Health, Paulina, La.
- Carolyn Nganga-Good, RN, MS, CPH, DrPH (ABD), Health Programs Bureau Administrator, Baltimore City Health Department, Baltimore, Md.
- Renee Frauendienst, RN, PHN, BSN, CPI, Public Health Division Director, Stearns County, St. Cloud, Minn.
- Kay Henry, MSN, RN, Director of Nursing, Mississippi State Department of Health, Jackson, Miss.
- Rachelle Collinge, MPH RN, Public Health Nursing Program Manager, Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, Jefferson City, Mo.
- Kathy Karsting, RN, MPH, Program Manager II/Supervisor MCAH Program, NE DHHS Division of Public Health, Lincoln, Neb.
- Amy Wilson, MPH, BSN, RN, APHN-BC, Chief Nurse, New Mexico Department of Health, Public Health Division, Santa Fe, N.M.
- Maria MacPherson, RN, MPH, Public Health Program Nurse, New York State Department of Health, Syracuse, N.Y.
- Connie Mele, MSN, RN, PMHCNS-BC, CARN-AP, NE-BC, LCAS, Deputy Health Director, Mecklenburg County, Charlotte, N.C.
- Nancie Bechtel, MPH, BSN, RN, EMT, Assistant Health Commissioner/Chief Nursing Officer, Columbus Public Health, Columbus, Ohio.
- Alexandria Jones, RN, MS, Director of Nursing, Ohio Department of Health, Columbus, Ohio.
- Monica Hughes, RN, BSN, Director of Public Health Nursing, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, Texas.
- Arturo Rodriguez, RN, RS, MPH, Director of Public Health, City of Brownsville Public Health Department, Brownsville, Texas.
- Dorene Hersh, RN, BSN, MN, Chief of Nursing, Public Health Seattle-King County, Seattle, Wash.
- Angela Gray, BSN, RN, Nurse Supervisor, Berkeley County Health Department, Martinsburg, W.Va
The RWJF Public Health Nurse Leaders program is located at the Center for Creative Leadership, a global thought leader in the leadership development field for 45 years.
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For more than 40 years the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has worked to improve the health and health care of all Americans. We are striving to build a national Culture of Health that will enable all to live longer, healthier lives now and for generations to come. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org. Follow the Foundation on Twitter at www.rwjf.org/twitter or on Facebook at www.rwjf.org/facebook.