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Dr. Kathryn Barnett

Dr. Rachel Booth

Dr. Charlie Dickson

Evelyn Hardy

Dr. Mary Harper

Ruth Harrell

Mary Catherine King

Dr. Kathleen Ladner

Dr. Linda Olivet

Dr. Hildagarde Reynolds

Surpora Thomas

Maxine Walker
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Twelve people, including the director
of a World Health Organization center, a woman who advised four
U.S. presidents on health care issues of the elderly, and a hospital
administrator who developed an innovative patient classification
system, will be inducted in the Alabama Nursing Hall of Fame, established
by The University of Alabama Capstone
College of Nursing.
The inductees will be honored Thursday, Oct. 9.
“This event gives us an opportunity to recognize some of
those who have brought honor and fame to both nursing and our state,”
said Dr. Sara Barger, dean of the UA Capstone College of Nursing
and event emcee. “They have bettered lives, both through the
patients and nursing students they have touched, individually, and
through the advancements they have brought to the health care profession.”
Those to be inducted into the 2003 class are:
Dr. Kathryn Barnett, who pioneered therapeutic touch and established
one of the first nursing doctoral programs in the nation at Texas
Woman’s University and who was the founding dean of Auburn
University Montgomery School of Nursing, where she served for 17
years;
Dr. Rachel Booth, dean of The University of Alabama School of Nursing
at UAB and director of the World Health Organization’s Collaborating
Center for International Nursing, and who has served as a consultant
to numerous universities and foreign countries on leadership, nursing
education, program evaluation and advanced nursing practices;
Dr. Charlie Dickson, the first African American Registered Nurse
to serve as president of the Alabama Board of Nursing, and whose
legislative efforts resulted in the implementation of reasonable
laws for mandatory continuing education for nurses’ license
renewal;
Evelyn Hardy, who independently sought financing to convert a Tuscaloosa
house – across the street from her own home – into a
nursing home where she and her mother would later rotate working
12 hour shifts to take care of the patients, and where she is still
on call 24 hours a day;
Dr. Mary Harper, who has twice won the surgeon general’s
Medal of Honor as an internationally recognized expert on issues
of aging and mental health needs, and who has established research
and development centers throughout the country and now spearheads
a program for caregivers, under the auspices of the Rosalyn Carter
Institute for Human Development;
Ruth Harrell, who retired from the Alabama Department of Public
Health, where she served as director of nursing from 1987-1993,
and who now co-directs the Southern Rural Access program, a Robert
Wood Johnson funded program designed to improve access to health
care for rural people;
Mary Catherine King, who served for four decades in various positions,
including director, at St. Vincent’s Hospital School of Nursing
in Birmingham. King promoted the importance of diplomas schools
of nursing and their emphasis on nursing skills learned at the bedside.
Retired, King is now a driving force behind that school of nursing’s
alumni association and scholarship program;
Dr. Kathleen Ladner, who serves as vice president of patient care
services at Baptist Princeton in Birmingham and who leads the Baptist
Princeton recruitment and retention of collaboration of nursing,
radiology technologists and pharmacists; she has held faculty appointments
in nursing at Samford University, UA, and the University of South
Alabama;
Dr. Linda Olivet, professor emeritus in the UA Capstone College
of Nursing, who has served in numerous capacities at UA, including
director of graduate studies and assistant dean in the College,
and who now provides educational programs on nursing and health
care through UA’s College of Continuing Studies;
Dr. Hildagarde Reynolds, who served two separate terms on the state’s
Board of Nursing, providing leadership critical to the impetus for
a significantly revised Nurse Practice Act. Her impact on nursing
also includes the development of associate degree programs and expansion
of baccalaureate programs;
Surpora Thomas, who is sometimes referred to as “Ms. Children’s
Hospital,” and who has nearly 40 years of experience at the
Birmingham facility; she developed an innovative patient classification
system, and its success has been noted in hospitals as far away
as Canada and she also initiated, in 1982, a pre-admissions screening
program still in use;
Maxine Walker, who has devoted almost 60 years to nursing and nursing
education ranging from helping educate nursing students, to assisting
the elderly with medication and aiding cancer patients. Walker joined
what would become DCH Regional Medical Center in 1955 and advanced
to become director of DCH’s nursing school, and she later
helped start the new nursing program at UA.
A gallery honoring these and previous Hall of Fame inductees is
permanently located in the UA Capstone College of Nursing. Members
of the College's Board of Visitors submit nominations for induction
into the Hall of Fame to the Hall's selection committee. The selection
committee reviews nominations and determines, by ballot, those to
be inducted.
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