Yale Bulletin and Calendar

January 14, 2005|Volume 33, Number 15|Two-Week Issue



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Margaret Grey



Margaret Grey named Goodrich
Professor of Nursing Research

Margaret Grey, the newly named Annie Goodrich Professor of Nursing Research, is a pediatric nurse practitioner who specializes in the care of children with diabetes.

Her research is aimed at helping children and families cope with chronic conditions, particularly children with diabetes mellitus. Grey also studies behavioral interventions that improve both the metabolic control of diabetes and the quality of life in young people and their parents, as well as in preventing Type 2 diabetes in high-risk youth. She has been instrumental in the development of practice-based research networks in nursing and has been the principal investigator for grants totaling over $15 million.

Grey has served as associate dean for scholarly affairs at the School of Nursing since 1993. She oversees the scholarly activities in the school and teaching in its doctoral program. She is also director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded Center for Self and Family Management and a related pre- and post-doctoral training program.

The pediatric nurse holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Pittsburgh, an M.S.N. in pediatric nursing from Yale (1976), and a doctorate in public health and social psychology from Columbia University. She held academic and administrative appointments at the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University before joining the Yale faculty in 1994 as the Independence Foundation Professor of Nursing and associate dean for research and doctoral studies.

The author of over 160 journal articles, chapters and abstracts, Grey has received numerous regional and national honors for her research. These include an Excellence in Nursing Research Award from the Association of Faculties of Nurse Practitioner Programs, the Achievement in Research Award from the National Organization of Nurse Practitioner Faculties, the Outstanding Nurse Researcher Award from the Eastern Nursing Research Society, and the Virginia Henderson Award for Outstanding Contributions to Nursing Research from the Connecticut Nurses' Association, among other awards.

In 2000, Grey was appointed by then U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna E. Shalala to the National Advisory Council for Nursing Research, the body that determines how federal money for nursing research should be spent. She has also served on NIH and Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality review panels, and was the chair of the Nursing Science Review Committee for the National Institute of Nursing Research from 1995 to 1997.

She was president of the National Association of Pediatric Nurse Associates and Practitioners and a member of the National Advisory Council for Nursing Research at the NIH. She is currently a member of the board of directors of the American Diabetes Association, where she has been instrumental in developing standards of behavioral care for youth with diabetes.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Campus responds to tsunami disaster with relief efforts

Alumnus' gift will fund environment center in new F&ES building

Fossils offer insights into consequences of extinction

Festival puts spotlight on the arts at Yale


ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

Campus events mark birthday of Martin Luther King Jr.

Astronomers' maps show dark matter clumps in galaxies

With grant, Yale to develop new programs to retain doctoral students

Exhibits feature landscape paintings in era of British exploration


SCHOOL OF MEDICINE NEWS

Engineer wins prestigious Nishizawa Medal

Colloquium honors retired professor Michael Holquist

Artworks based on sacred themes and Ethiopian iconography . . .

Works by 'mythic figure in modern art' are the focus . . .

Exhibit showcases examples of crimes in ancient history

Evolution is theme of scientist's Terry Lectures

Himalayan kingdom is topic of next Tetelman Lecture

Statue honors accomplishments of Yale's first Chinese student

World Conservation Union adopts resolution by F&ES students

In Memoriam: Dr. Nicholas M. Greene

Campus Notes


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