MURFREESBORO — An
MTSU nursing professor is the 2013 recipient of the Tennessee Nurses
Association’s Excellence in Nursing Education Award.
Dr. Debra Rose Wilson was presented with the honor at the
group’s annual convention in Murfreesboro. The statewide award “recognizes
outstanding performance in nursing education and nursing leadership, which
improves the quality of nursing care, and professional and community service,”
according to www.tnaonline.org.
On a 2010 trip to the University of Botswana to speak to
nurse leaders about stress management and self-care, Wilson originated the “I
Am Proud to Be a Nurse” campaign to improve the image of nurses in the African
nation.
“There were rumors of nurse-to-patient violence in Botswana
and they went viral,” said Wilson, who received the award Oct. 18.
Funding the project with $13,000 of her own money, Wilson
designed pins with the message “I Am Proud to Be a Nurse” and distributed the
pins to every nurse in the country. Extra pins were sold for $5 each to help
recoup costs.
The MTSU Student Nurses Association took up the cause and
held bake sales and pin sales on and off campus. The project paid for itself by
the summer of 2013 and resulted in seven publications in newsletters and
journals, two national poster presentations and a national podium presentation.
Since 2000, Wilson has volunteered at the Nashville Rape and
Sexual Abuse Center, first teaching women’s self-care classes and transitioning
into stress management training.
She directs stress management and hypnosis classes for the
Renfrew Eating Disorder Clinic, the Tennessee Technology Center and Trigeminal
Neuralgia Association in Nashville and the St. Clair Street Senior Center in
Murfreesboro.
Wilson also donates her time at the national and Davidson
County levels to SHARE Pregnancy and Infant Loss and Support, an organization
serving people touched by the death of a baby.
In addition, she has been managing editor of the
International Journal of Childbirth Education for the past three years.
For her development of Psych Pharm, an online tool, she
received the MTSU Outstanding Achievement in Instructional Technology Award for
2009-2010. Wilson also has received the Harold Love Outstanding Community
Service Award for Faculty in Tennessee from the Tennessee Higher Education and
the 2012 Distinguished Educator in Distance Learning Award from MTSU.
An MTSU School of Nursing colleague, Dr. Karen Ward, notes
that Wilson “has been recognized by MTSU as faculty that has made a difference
in students’ lives every semester for the past several years. She has
influenced junior faculty and graduate students as a role model to scholarly
activity.”
Dr. Shelley Moore, an assistant professor of nursing,
states, “Debra is selfless. She helps students and colleagues alike to grow
professionally. She constantly offers her time to help when you know she does
not have any more time than anyone else.”
Wilson seems to be defying the laws of physics by finding
the time somehow to pursue a doctoral degree in physics. She believes this will
help bolster the academic credibility of her belief in holistic therapeutic techniques
such as hypnosis, acupuncture and aromatherapy.
“I have to have my foot in the empirical world,” Wilson
said. “With a degree in physics, I will test and evaluate and take the next
step.”
As if all this isn’t enough, Wilson is a nominee for a
Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellowship to work in the White House in the
2014-2015 academic year. If she is chosen, she will spend a year conducting
health research in Washington, D.C. Wilson says she hopes to work in the U.S.
Surgeon General’s office if she is selected.
The short list of nominees is to be announced in January
2014. The top six will be revealed in February 2014.
For more information, contact Wilson at 615-898-5841 or debra.wilson@mtsu.edu.
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