Jan Atwood, Ph.D., UNMC College of Nursing, receives Lifetime Achievement Award from Midwest Nursing Research Society

Jan Atwood, Ph.D., of the University of Nebraska Medical Center College

of Nursing, recently received the Midwest Nursing Research Societys Lifetime

Achievement Award at the societys annual conference in Chicago. The Midwest

Nursing Research Society, which covers a 13-state region, has more than

1,400 members. For 20 years, it has been promoting the growth of nursing

research quality and quantity in the Midwest.

Dr. Atwood is the Niedfelt Professor of nursing with specialties in

oncology and community health nursing, as well as professor of preventive

and societal medicine in the College of Medicine. She also is research

director of the Nebraska Office of Tobacco Control and Research at UNMC,

which is a multi-campus, multidisciplinary endeavor.

The award recognizes a society member who has significantly advanced

the profession of nursing through an extensive program of research or creation

of environments where research can flourish, and whose distinguished career

yielded outstanding and noteworthy accomplishments, said Lauren Aaronson,

Ph.D., president of the Midwest Nursing Research Society and professor

at the University of Kansas School of Nursing.

Dr. Atwoods program of community-based research has made many contributions

in the areas of health promotion and compliance, and intervention development

and testing, she said. The society is most proud to count on her as one

of our own and are delighted to honor her with this award.

One of Dr. Atwoods research focuses is designing ways to measure whether

or not a researchers interventions are successful. She teaches others

how to develop measures and has provided measurement expertise to scientists

in and from many countries and disciplines.

It was nice to have international, interdisciplinary research and mentoring

rewarded so junior scientists might better understand their value, Dr.

Atwood said. I feel this recognition also reflects the research program

at the UNMC College of Nursing.

She was recognized in January for her research and education efforts

when she received the Florence Niedfelt Professorship, an endowed, three-year

appointment for excellence in research, teaching, leadership and mentoring.

She received her bachelors degree in nursing in 1964, and her masters

degree in public health in 1967, from the University of Michigan. She received

an masters degree in sociology in 1976, and her doctoral degree in educational

psychology in 1976, with a minor in nursing from the University of Arizona.

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