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AWARDS &
HONORS
Lang first nurse to earn
Codman
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Norma
Lang
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Norma Lang, professor of nursing,
is the first nurse and woman to receive the prestigious 2001 Ernest A.
Codman Award. Lang earned the honor, which is presented by the Joint Commission
on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, for her work in developing
a scientific system for the comparison and evaluation of nursing practices
and the quality of care worldwide.
A pioneer of first quality assurance efforts in the nursing profession,
Lang helped develop a standardized vocabulary and classification that
can be used in both electronic and paper records to describe nursing practices
in various clinical settings. Adopted in numerous countries, the international
classification system is commonly referred to as the Lang Model.
The Codman Award, which previously had gone only to doctors and organizations,
recognizes those who make significant advances in the quality of healthcare.
A Philadelphia resident, Lang serves Penn in various waysshe is
senior research fellow in the Annenberg Center for Public Policy, senior
fellow in the Leonard Davis Institute for Health Economics, advisor and
faculty member for the Wharton Johnson & Johnson Program in Management
for Nurse Executives and head of the Penn Macy Institute to Advance Academic
Nursing Practice.
More nursing kudos
Karen Buhler-Wilkerson should
be pleased with the success of her new book, No Place Like Home:
A History of Nursing and Home Care in the United States. It recently
received the Lavinia Dock Award from the American Association for the
History of Nursing.
Ann L. OSullivan is
now chair of the Executive Committee of the Section on Public Healthy
and Preventive Medicine at the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.
The committee aims to create awareness about and spur change in public
policy for the betterment of community members. OSullivan is currently
an associate professor of primary care nursing at Penn and conducts research
on adolescent pregnancy and its prevention.
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