UW receives $3.5 million for
first endowed nursing
deanship
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Nancy Fugate Woods The Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Endowed Dean in Nursing |
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January 22, 2007
SEATTLE—Robert G.
and Jean A. Reid, University of Washington alumni and former owners of Reid
Sand & Gravel, have made a $3.5 million donation to the University of
Washington School of Nursing to establish the school's first endowed deanship:
the Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Endowed Deanship in Nursing. On Jan. 22, Dr.
Nancy Fugate Woods, dean of the UW School of Nursing since 1998, will become
the first recipient of the deanship.
The Reid Endowed
Deanship in Nursing is the second endowed deanship at UW-Seattle—the School of
Engineering established a $4 million deanship in 2005—and the third endowed
nursing deanship in the country; the others are at the University of
Pennsylvania and Villanova University. Longtime UW benefactors and honorary
co-chairs of the School of Nursing's fund-raising campaign, the Reids made this
major gift to the School of Nursing as a tribute to the leadership of Dean
Woods, as well as to the excellent nursing care each of them has experienced
personally.
Their gift is also
a response to the looming nursing faculty shortage, which will make competition
for top-flight nursing deans even tighter. According to the American
Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), 62.5 percent of deans and directors
who are members of AACN are over the age of 55 and are nearing retirement
eligibility. Only 3.1 percent of nursing school deans and directors are under
the age of 45.
The Reids'
financial support will give the UW School of Nursing a strategic advantage in
recruiting and retaining high-caliber nursing leaders who can keep the school's
curriculum cutting- edge, its graduates highly sought-after, and its ranking
the highest in the country.
"We were inspired
by Nancy's innovative leadership and her passion for the field of nursing and
the UW School of Nursing," said Jean Reid. "She has shown us the level of
greatness that can be achieved when the right leader is matched with the right
institution. Now we want to ensure that both she and future deans of her
caliber are well supported financially, so that they can take the school to
even greater heights—including its contributions to solving global health
crises."
For Woods,
receiving this endowed deanship is the culmination of a lifetime of leadership
in the field of nursing. At the UW School of Nursing, she has served as chair
of the Department of Family and Child Nursing and associate dean for research.
Some of her most noteworthy achievements include: at Duke University, helping
conduct the first prevalence study of premenstrual symptoms in American women,
and at UW, helping establish the Center for Women's Health Research in 1989 to
study women's health across the life span.
Woods has served
as president of the American Academy of Nursing and the Society for Menstrual
Cycle Research. She was also a member of the National Advisory Council on
Nursing Research for the National Institute of Nursing Research and was elected
to the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences. Her education in
nursing began at Wisconsin State University–Eau Claire, where she received a
bachelor's degree in nursing in 1968. She completed her master of nursing
degree at the University of Washington in 1969 and received her Ph.D. in
epidemiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1978. Woods
also received honorary doctorates from the University of Pennsylvania, the
University of Haifa in Israel and Chiang Mai University in Thailand.
For more
information about the Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Endowed Deanship in Nursing,
please contact Lia Unrau, communications director for the UW
School of Nursing, at unrau@u.washington.edu or 206-221-2456.
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