TAILIEUCHUNG - Women’s Health Care in Advanced Practice Nursing

Women’s health is inextricably linked to the context in which they live their lives. Only within the past few decades have researchers and clinicians acknowledged the importance of women’s lived experiences for their well-being. The feminist movement of the 1960s and 1970s prompted critical analysis of women’s health and its relationship to society, and of women’s health care options. | Women s Health Care in Advanced Practice Nursing Catherine Ingram Fogel Nancy Fugate Woods Editors Women s Health Care in Advanced Practice Nursing Catherine Ingram Fogel PhD WHCNP-BC FAAN is a professor and coordinator of the Women s Health Practice Area at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Nursing. She is the author of several texts on women s health including the award-winning Women s Health Care Fogel Woods 1995 and has authored numerous research and clinical articles on women s health. For the past thirty years she has had a both a sustained research program and clinical practice with incarcerated women. Her research has increased nursing s awareness and understanding of the health problems of incarcerated women. Fogel is the principle investigator on one NIH funded and one CDC funded grant focusing on prevention of sexually transmitted infections and HIV in women another NIH funded grant exploring the experiences of parenting from prison and a CDC-funded grant to deliver an STI risk reduction intervention to HIV-infected women living in the Southeast. Fogel is a member of the American Nurses Association the Association for Women s Health Obstetrics and Neonatal Nurses and Sigma Theta Tau. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Nursing. She has been certified as a women s health care nurse practitioner since 1982. She received a North Carolina Community Service Award for her work with women prisoners and the 1993 AWHONN National Excellence in Clinical Practice Award. Nancy Fugate Woods PhD RN FAAN is dean of the School of Nursing and professor in the Department of Family and Child Nursing at the University of Washington. Since the late 1970s she has led a sustained program of research in the field of women s health. Her collaborative research has resulted in an improved understanding of women s transition to menopause including hormonal and psychosocial factors as well as menstrual cycle symptoms. Her work has advanced nursing care

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