Part I Basic clinical issues with elderly populations: common geriatric problems; becoming frail - failure to thrive; delirium; co-morbidity - assessment and impact; pain; nutrition; injury prevention. Part II Nursing assessment and management: clinical approach; pharmacological therapy; patient education; evaluating outcomes; discharge planning - design and implementation; family responses to critical care. Part III Specialized practice in critical care nursing: trauma care; medical intensive care; coronary care. Part IV Social and policy issues: ethical decision making; end of life care; spiritual and religious care; legal guidelines for treatment; policy issues; culture.
Terry Fulmer, PhD, RN, FAAN, is the President of the John A.
Hartford Foundation in New York City, a foundation dedicated to
improving the care of older adults. Established in 1929, the
Foundation has a current endowment of more than half a billion
dollars. She serves as the chief strategist for the Foundation, and
her vision for better care of older adults is catalyzing the
Age-Friendly Health Systems social movement. She is an elected
member of the National Academy of Medicine and served on the
independent Coronavirus Commission for Safety and Quality in
Nursing Homes established to advise the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services. She previously served as Distinguished Professor
and Dean of Health Sciences at Northeastern University. Prior, she
served as the Erline Perkins McGriff Professor and Founding Dean of
the New York University College of Nursing. She received her
bachelor's degree from Skidmore College, her master's and doctoral
degrees from Boston College, and her Geriatric Nurse Practitioner
Post-Master's Certificate from New York University. She completed a
Brookdale National Fellowship and is the first nurse to have served
on the board of the American Geriatrics Society. She is also the
first nurse to have served as President of the Gerontological
Society of America, which awarded her the 2019 Donald P. Kent Award
for exemplifying the highest standards for professional leadership
in the field of aging. Dr. Fulmer is nationally and internationally
recognized as a leading expert in geriatrics. She is known for
conceptualization and development of the Age-Friendly Health
Systems movement and the national Nurses Improving Care for
Healthsystem Elders (NICHE) program, as well as for her research on
the topic of elder abuse and neglect, which has been funded by the
National Institute on Aging and the National Institute of Nursing
Research. She is a Trustee for the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation,
Springer Publishing Company, and the Bassett Healthcare System and
is a Member of the Reimagining Long-Term Care Task Force in New
York State and a member of the National Academy of Medicine's Forum
on Aging, Disability, and Independence. Dr. Fulmer also serves as
Vice Chair of the Department of Veterans Affairs Special Medical
Advisory Group. She was the Chair of the National Advisory
Committee for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Executive Nurse
Fellows Program and held board positions at Skidmore College, the
Institute for Healthcare Improvement, the Geriatrics and
Gerontology Advisory Committee for the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs, and the Advisory Board for Hong Kong Polytechnic
University School of Nursing. She is one of the top 50 Influencers
in Aging by PBS's Next Avenue, the premier digital publication
dedicated to covering issues for older Americans. Dr. Fulmer is the
recipient of prestigious awards, including the American Society on
Aging's 2017 Rosalie S. Wolf Award for her body of work on elder
abuse. In 2016, she received the 2016 Award for Exceptional Service
to The New York Academy of Medicine for her distinguished service
on the Academy's Board of Trustees, including as vice-chair, and
for her active engagement in the policy work of the Academy,
especially its Age-Friendly NYC initiative. She has been honored
with invitations for named lectureships from noted universities.
She has held faculty appointments at Columbia University, where she
was the Anna C. Maxwell Chair in Nursing, and she has also held
appointments at Boston College, Yale University, and the Harvard
Division on Aging at Harvard Medical School. She has served as a
visiting professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania and
Case Western Reserve University. She is a Distinguished
Practitioner of the National Academies of Practice and is currently
an attending nurse at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City.
Her clinical appointments have included the Beth Israel Hospital in
Boston, the Massachusetts General Hospital, and the NYU Langone
Medical Center. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing,
the Gerontological Society of America, and the New York Academy of
Medicine, where she served as vice-chair. She has authored more
than 150 peer-reviewed papers and edited 23 books.
Marquis D. Foreman, PhD, RN, FAAN, is the John L. and Helen Kellogg
dean of nursing at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago,
Illinois.
Mary F. Walker, PhD, RN, FAAN, is Dean and Professor at the School
of Nursing, Seattle University.
Kristen S. Montgomery, PhD, RNC, IBCLC, is an Assistant Professor
of Nursing at The University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |