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APPOINTMENTS
A
Global Dean for Nursing
 |
| Dr.
Afaf Meleis |
The
School of Nursing has a new
dean: Dr. Afaf I. Meleis, a prolific nursing scholar in the University
of California system. A prominent medical sociologist, the Egyptian-born
Meleis spent most of the past 30 years at UC-San Francisco, as professor
in the nursing schools Department of Community Health Systems and as
an associate in nursing for the Nursing Service. She also spent two years
in the mid-seventies as associate professor at the University of Kuwaits
School of Medicine and as dean of the Kuwaiti Ministry of Educations
Health Institute.
Penn
President Judith Rodin praised Meleis international reputation as a
nurse and medical sociologist, adding that she is ideally suited to
attract even more prominence to our School of Nursing, which is already
a recognized leader in its field.
Meleis,
who will start at Penn in January, replaces Dr. Norma Lang, who stepped
down in August of 2000 after serving as dean for eight years. Meleis says
she didnt have her sights set on the deans job.
A
deanship was definitely not in my career plans, said Meleis, who spoke
to the Gazette from San Francisco, in between trips to Finland
and Germany. The fact that I was attracted to the job came from the fact
that the school is highly prominent in research and has many well-known
and renowned scholars. It is definitely on the map as being innovative,
visionary, and quite responsive to issues important to national health
care. It has a real presence in the country.
In
addition to the high caliber of students, Meleis said she was impressed
by how committed President Rodin and Provost [Robert] Barchi are to the
school, adding: The fact that President Rodin was incredibly informed
about the accomplishments of the faculty gave a clear message of the prominence
and significance of nursing to the Universitys overall agenda. And the
fact that she herself was able to meet with the deans of the other schools,
Meleis said, was a clear message about the importance of collaboration.
The
initiatives Ive been working on match where the school and the University
are going, she said.
Meleis
primary fields of scholarship are theory and knowledge-development, immigrant
and international health, and womens health. In addition to more than
100 articles and dozens of book chapters, she is the author of Theoretical
Nursing: Development and Progress, and co-author of a book on immigrant
women.
The
challenges facing the nursing school are similar to those facing nursing
nationally, and facing all prominent schools of nursing, Meleis said.
The first is continuing to attract and retain the best students at a
time when were facing economic constraints, a decreasing pool of students
interested in nursing, and an increasingly aged population.
Meleis
also cited the need to simultaneously balance our commitments to national
nursing and international nursing. While she believes the school is positioned
to make a substantial contribution to international nursing, she acknowledged
that the economic constraints were facing makes it a very tricky balance.
Her
own perspectives on health care are not only based on my country of heritage,
which I left 40 years ago, she added. Theyre really based on my current
extensive research and consultation on the national and international
levels. And her research has made her a firm believer that healthcare
solutions in one region of the world can influence solutions in other
regions of the world.
Another
challenge for the school, she said, is to recruit students and faculty
who represent diverse ethnic backgrounds in order to respond to the needs
of a diverse population. Doing so will help to develop the knowledge
and models of care that are more responsive to the needs of a diverse
populationand thus decrease the disparity in healthcare that different
people and groups receive.
The
terrorist attack in Sep-tember, she said, sharpened for me the importance
of seeing different perspectives and worldviewsand respecting them.
Her
own research on womens health issues has made her a lot more sensitive
to issues of disparity, inequity, and marginalization, Meleis said, and
to the need to uncover and allow different voices to be heard. Womens
work is often overlooked by traditional economic evaluations, she noted,
and as a result, we dont design healthcare programs for them.
Meleis
began her teaching career as an instructor in nursing at the University
of Alexandria, where she completed her undergraduate nursing education
in 1961. She earned her masters degrees in nursing and sociology in 1964
and 1966 at UCLA, followed by a Ph.D. in medical social psychology in
1968. In 1971, she moved to UCSF as an assistant professor, and became
a full professor there in 1980.
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Gazette Last modified 11/1/01
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