Nursing Grant Scholars

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The American Nurses Foundation was founded as the educational, scientific and charitable arm of the ANA. Over the years, ANF has played a vital role in providing support for some of the major scientific studies of the profession. Back in 1955 when ANF was founded, our nursing leaders had the foresight to recognize how important it would be to support nursing research. Since then more than 950 researchers have made extraordinary contributions to our science, providing a foundation for our future practice.

Here’s an inside look at the paths taken by outstanding nurses who began their research careers with funding by ANF and how their studies have shaped and continue to influence nursing practice.

Roster of Scholars

  • 2012 ANF Scholars

  • 2011 ANF Scholars

  • Nursing Research Grant Scholars 1955 to 2012

  • 2012 NRG Abstracts

  • 2011 NRG Abstracts

  • 2010 NRG Abstracts

  • 2009 NRG Abstracts

  • Jo Eleanor Elliott, MA, BSN, RN, FAAN

    The American Nurses Association (ANA) and the American Nurses Foundation (ANF) are saddened by the passing of Jo Eleanor Elliott, MA, BSN, RN, FAAN, who served as ANA’s president for a critical four-year period in the 1960s.
  • Kate Lorig, DrPh, RN

    The comfort that many of chronic pain
    sufferers have today is notable because
    the American Nurses Foundation (ANF) was
    there when Kate Lorig, DrPh, RN wanted to make a positive impact.
  • Dr. Pam Cipriano Named 2010-2011 IOM Nurse Scholar-In-Residence

    Pamela Cipriano, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, was the 2010-2011 Institute of Medicine (IOM) Nurse Scholar-in-Residence Program, sponsored by the American Nurses Foundation (ANF), American Academy of Nurses (AAN), American Nurses Association (ANA). She studied the impact of Health Information Technologies (HIT) on nursing workflow, patient safety and outcomes as well as identify the characteristics necessary to achieve team-based care with multiple disciplinary use of electronic health information.
  • Margretta Madden Styles, RN, EdD, FAAN

    ANF Nursing Research Grant Highlight

    Dr. Margretta “Gretta” Madden Styles was dedicated to promoting quality in nursing and health care. As the architect of the first comprehensive study of nurse credentialing in the 1970s, Dr. Styles recognized the critical importance of credentialing before broad awareness of its value for nursing had been achieved.
  • Elaine L. Larson, PhD, RN, FAAN, CIC

    "Wash your hands! The simplest protection!"

    Nicknamed the “hand-washing queen” due to her research on this humble, but highly effective health habit, Dr. Larson is now associate dean for research at Columbia University School of Nursing.

  • Former ANF President, Margarete L. Zalon, PhD, RN, ACNS-BC

    Dr. Zalon first encountered ANF as an ANF Scholar through the ANF Nursing Research Grants (NRG) Program. She credits ANF with starting her research career with a grant funded by the Wallerstein Foundation for Geriatric Life Improvement in 1991.
  • Linda Finch, PhD, RN

    When Linda Finch, PhD, RN, made her first attempt to garner an ANF grant, she was not successful. But because reviewers' took the time to offer their advice, she was able to resubmit a stronger research proposal, which led to her becoming a 2004 ANF scholar.

    "My whole area of focus has been looking at the nurse-patient relationship and particularly the caring piece of it," says Finch, a Tennessee Nurses Association member.

  • Barbara Medoff-Cooper, PhD, CRNP, RN, FAAN

    In 1983, Barbara Medoff-Cooper, PhD, CRNP, RN, FAAN, used her ANF grant to study what was close to her heart—infant development. At the time, she was a pediatric nurse practitioner and a doctoral student at Temple University.

    "I was seeing a number of preemies in the office," says Medoff Cooper, a Pennsylvania State Nurses Association member. "Their parents were having problems taking care of them, because the babies were so crabby, so difficult."

  • Jean McSweeney, PhD, RN, FAHA, FAAN

    Dr. McSweeney has contributed significantly to the field of women's cardiovascular disease. Although she has received prestigious funding for her research endeavors, ANF provided her first funding as a SNRS/ANF Scholar. According to Dr. McSweeney, the study conducted with funds from ANF provided the essential foundation for her work on women's prodromal and acute symptoms associated with myocardial infarction and served as the springboard for her future studies.
  • Bashira Abdullah Charles, MSN, RN, NP

    Understanding genetics and diabetes
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