Dr. Megan Aston is an Associate Professor at Dalhousie University School of Nursing in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada where she teaches Family and Community Health Nursing, and Qualitative Health Research. Her passion and expertise is in Family Health Nursing with a focus on maternal, infant and child health. She has conducted numerous research studies examining therapeutic relationships between nurses and families in the community as well as in the hospital. She worked as a public health nurse for many years and now studies postpartum early home visiting by public health nurses with new mothers. She has also focused on 1) queer women’s birthing experiences in rural Nova Scotia; 2) hospital experiences of children with intellectual disabilities, their parents and nurses who take care of them; 3) bereavement care by nurses with families whose child has died; and 4) bereavement care by Victorian Order of Nurses (VON) nurses in the community with families of all ages. She uses feminist poststructuralism to guide her research which includes personal, social, and institutional constructions of the practices of nurses and clients. Read more about her work and publications at http://www.dal.ca/faculty/healthprofessions/nursing/faculty-staff/halifax-faculty/megan-aston.html. For more information, contact IFNA member Megan Aston: [email protected]
Dr. Erla Kolbrún Svavarsdottir: Honorary Scientist Award 2014, Landspitali University Hospital, Iceland
Dr. Erla Kolbrún Svavarsdottir, Professor, University of Iceland and Chairman of the Academic Council of Family Nursing at University Hospital was awarded the prestigious Honorary Scientist Award 2014 at a special ceremony on May 7, 2014 at Landspitali University Hospital, Iceland. Dr. Svavarsdottir has studied persistence, resilience, coping, health- related quality of life, well-being, violence in intimate relationships, and adaptation and integration in families who are living with chronic diseases in both Iceland and the United States. Dr. Svavarsdottir served as Principal Investigator of the Landspitali University Knowledge Translation Research Project in Reykjavik, Iceland that took place from 2007-2011. Family Systems Nursing (FSN) was implemented at an institutional level on every unit of a large 900-bed university hospital in Iceland. A Steering Committee of nursing practice leaders and knowledge users collaborated in the implementation of the educational intervention focused on teaching practicing nursing the skill of offering brief therapeutic conversations to families. A quasi-experimental design examined family and nurse outcomes across several populations of families in both inpatient and outpatient settings. Mentoring of research skills also involved master and doctoral students in the Faculty of Nursing at the University of Iceland who were included in this knowledge translation research. The project also resulted in the psychometric development of two new research instruments: the Iceland-Expressive Family Functioning Questionnaire [ICE-EFFQ]and the Iceland-Family Perceived Support Questionnaire [ICE-FPSQ]. Dr. Svavarsdottir has written over 60 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters and she has co-edited two academic books. In addition, Dr. Svavarsdottir has mentored numerous students in the BS program as well as students in master’s and doctoral studies at the Faculty of Nursing , University of Iceland. For more information or to offer your congratulations, contact IFNA member Erla Svavarsdottir: [email protected]
Research Group in Family Nursing: Escola Superior de Enfermagem do Porto, Portugal
The Research Group in Family Nursing of Escola Superior de Enfermagem do Porto, Portugal, has been involved in research and education related to Family Nursing since 2004. The main purpose of this research group is to promote and support research in nursing family, using a variety of conceptual and methodological frameworks. They have developed a fruitful network with researchers, educators, and practitioners both from Europe (Austria, Germany, Poland, Romania, Scotland, Slovenia Spain, Sweden) and overseas (Angola, Brazil, Canada, United States). Beginning in 2007, the group has organized an annual International Symposium to share research findings and innovation in family nursing and has involved graduate students from Master’s and PhD programs in Portugal. In October 2013, the group completed their participation in a 24 month project, “Family Health Nursing in European Communities”, funded by the European Union and coordinated by University of the West of Scotland, Scotland. Eight European countries were involved in this project and the Final Report received an 80% rating from the European Union. For more information, contact IFNA member Maria do Céu Barbieri Figueiredo: [email protected]
Dr. Sonja Meiers Conducts Family-Focused Intervention Research with Immigrant Families
Dr. Sonja J. Meiers, Professor, Winona State University-Rochester, United States, is co-investigator in a five-year study funded by the National Institutes of Health, United States (R01 HL111407) entitled “Healthy Immigrant Families: Working Together To Move More and to Eat Well “ (Co-P.I.s: Sia, I. G., Nigon, J. A., & Wieland, M. L.). Rochester Healthy Community Partnership (RHCP), Rochester, MN, a group of academics and community members who use community-based participatory research methods to improve health, worked together to develop the study approach. Community members from the Hispanic, Somali, and Sudanese communities worked within RHCP to develop the sustainable, socio-culturally appropriate intervention. Bilingual community Family Health Promoters (FHPs) have been trained to deliver the intervention. The intervention is a home-based, individualized family mentoring and education session series for physical activity and healthy eating. Dr. Meiers has been integrally involved in the family-based intervention development and training of the FHPs. The efficacy of the intervention will be evaluated by using a two-group, immediate and delayed group, randomized design, to assess individual’s (including both adults and adolescents) physical activity and dietary change, and a number of biometrics before and after the intervention. Further information about this and other projects of RHCP is available at http://rochesterhealthy.org/website/. Watch an IFNA YouTube video of Dr. Meiers talking about her research: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ar2nMBRC0ps.
Dr. Sonja Meiers served as the President of IFNA from 2019-2021 and developed the following important statements on behalf of IFNA:
- Racism and Family Health
COVID-19 Pandemic and Family Nursing: IFNA President and President-Elect Offer a Message to Members
For more information, contact IFNA member, Sonja Meiers: [email protected]
Dr. June Horowitz Focuses on Perinatal Family Mental Health
Dr. June Andrews Horowitz is Associate Dean for Nursing Graduate Studies and Research & Professor, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, U.S.A. Her most notable scholarly contributions concern perinatal family mental health. Dr. Horowitz has published and presented extensively. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, board certified Clinical Specialist in Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing, and Executive Board member for Mother-Baby Connections and she helps people with mental issues like anxiety and depression, while also recommending great products such as HHC gummies that help a lot in this area.
Dr. Horowitz has tirelessly served as co-chair of the 13th International Family Nursing Conference (2017); 14th International Family Nursing Conference (2019); and the 15th International Family Nursing Conference (2021). She was recently elected to serve as President-Elect of IFNA 2021-2023.
For more information, contact IFNA member, June Horowitz: [email protected]