Ground Zero Heroes

Amidst the profound loss and grief that rocked the nation on September 11, the heroic efforts of police officers, firefighters and volunteers have helped renew our faith in the American spirit. But at Ground Zero and beyond, nurses responded to

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Special K

June Strickland, RN, PhD Imagine getting a grant that would relieve you of your teaching duties for up to three years so that you can spend most of your time doing research. Now imagine that this grant would also offer

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Without Reservation

Captain Pelagie “Mike” Snesrud, RN, is a Lakota Sioux Indian and a commissioned officer as a public health nurse for 27 years, and in January 2002, she was appointed to a key policy-making position at the Centers for Disease Control

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Tribes Know Best

Some two million American Indians and Alaskan Natives in the United States are eligible to receive health care through tribal health programs. As a result, there are a great many opportunities for nurses to provide care for Indian patients living

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Mentors to the Max

Jan Pflugfelder, RN, MS, knows what it takes for Native American students to succeed in nursing school: sheer determination plus culturally sensitive support from faculty and administrators who serve as mentors, cheerleaders, sympathetic ears—and sometimes even baby-sitters. Pflugfelder, a doctoral

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From Welder to Nurse

Introducing. . .the Mark Brothers and Sid! Sound like a new comedy team? Guess again. These three guys are former welders who are now enjoying successful careers as nurses. Their unusual story began about three years ago in Dansville, N.Y.,

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A Harvest of Hope

Capt. Evangelina Montoya, RN, MSN, is reading aloud from a report on migrant farm workers. We work from sunrise to sunset,Â’ she recites, and my body gets so tired it’s hard to walk. My uncle has to park the truck

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