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$5 Million to Renovate & Rename Nursing Building for Claire Fagin

Claire Fagin

The School of Nursing has received a $5 million gift from The Annenberg Foundation to support the renovation and renaming of its building for Dean Emerita Claire M. Fagin, a pioneer in nursing research.

Dr. Fagin, who served as dean of the Penn School of Nursing from 1977 to 1992, helped transform the profession of nursing through emphasis on research and nursing science. She established a number of centers, including the Center for Nursing Research, that have produced a generation of Penn researchers who have gone on to make significant contributions to nursing.

From 1993 to 1994, Dr. Fagin served as Penn’s interim president. She most recently served as director of the John A. Hartford Foundation National Program “Building Academic Geriatric Nursing Capacity” and continues to provide organizational and nursing consulting to private and public groups.

“This unique gift positions the School to take yet another step in its path from excellence to eminence. We are tremendously grateful to Mrs. Leonore Annenberg and The Annenberg Foundation for honoring Claire Fagin’s exemplary leadership while supporting Penn Nursing’s incredible work improving health and health care,”  President Amy Gutmann said.

“The Annenberg Foundation’s generous support will enable us to create an environment for our researchers to continue the advancement of nursing science and thus build on the legacy left by Dr. Fagin,” said Dr. Afaf I. Meleis, Margaret Bond Simon Dean of the School of Nursing.  In 1998, Dr. Fagin was honored as a Living Legend of the American Academy of Nursing.

 The Annenberg gift is a milestone in Penn Nursing’s campaign to renovate its building. Phase 2 of renovations—projected to cost $15 million—calls for new laboratories and offices on the upper floors to encourage closer collaboration between researchers and scholars.

Dean Meleis characterized the renovations as “breaking down walls, both literally and figuratively, to support the work of faculty and students.” 

It follows an earlier renovation that provided students with improved technology, space for social interaction and improved student services and admissions areas (Almanac November 16, 2004).

Under Dr. Fagin’s leadership, the School of Nursing topped other schools in federal funding from the National Institutes of Health. In addition, the World Health Organization paid special recognition by naming the School a World Health Organization Collaborating Center for International Nursing.

The Annenberg Foundation is the successor corporation to the Annenberg School at Radnor, PA, established in 1958 by the late Walter H. Annenberg, a Penn alum. 



 
  Almanac, Vol. 52, No. 21, February 7, 2006

ISSUE HIGHLIGHTS:

Tuesday,
February 7, 2006
Volume 52 Number 21
www.upenn.edu/almanac

 

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