Environmental Health and Nursing Practice
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Product Description
Univ. of Maryland, Baltimore. Provides information on basic environmental health principles and common environmental health hazards. Offers a patient assessment tool for exposure to hazards and strategies for use of hospital resources. DNLM: Environmental Health.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1044670 in Books
- Published on: 2002-11-14
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 384 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Barbara Sattler, RN, DrPH
Dr. Barbara Sattler is the Director of the Environmental Health Center at the University of Maryland School of Nursing where she is an Associate Professor. The Environmental Health Education Center, a multi-disciplinary center in Baltimore, is engaged in training, education, and research related to environmental health. Dr. Sattler is the principle investigator and co-investigator on several projects including a new "Healthy Homes Initiative" funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and an EPA-funded, continuing education initiative with the American Nurses Association. Dr. Sattler is the PI for "Community Outreach" for the EPA Hazardous Substance Research Center at eh John Hopkins University Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering in which the University of Maryland is a collaborator and she and staff are working with communities concerned about hazardous waste sites. And, Dr. Sattler is the PI on a grant form Health Services Resource Administration within DHHS to create a graduate degree program in environmental health for nurses at the University of Maryland, the first in the country. This program is nested within the Master's Degree in Community/Public Health Nursing.
Dr. Sattler is on the Education Committee of the Children's Environmental Health Network where she has helped to develop a train-the-trainer program for medical and nursing faculty on children's environmental health. During the summer, she organizes a summer institute for school-based nurses on environmental health. She is the manager of a Kellogg-funded project for nursing faculty development on environmental health, a project that spans the 16-state southern region and is also currently funded by the Bauman Foundation to improve knowledge and increase advocacy among health care professionals in t he area of safe drinking water. Dr. Sattler's particular areas of interest are community-based environmental health assessments/interventions, "right to know" issues, and risk communication.
Dr. Sattler's past positions have included Director of the National Center for Hazard Communication, Health and Safety Staff to the United Steelworkers of America, and Director of the Maryland Committee on Occupational Safety and Health (COSH). She is a Registered Nurse with both a Masters and Doctorate in Public Health from the John Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health. She holds joint appointments in the Department of Epidemiology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and an Adjunct Appointment in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the John Hopkins University School of Public Health.
Jane Lipscomb, RN, PhD, FAAN
Dr. Jane Lipscomb is an Associate Professor at eh University of Maryland at Baltimore (UMAB) School of Nursing. She has conducted research into the occupational hazards facing health care workers for the past twenty years. She was faculty for a Kellogg funded grant to conduct nursing faculty development in environmental health. She is active within the American Public Health Association leadership. Prior to joining the faculty at UMD, Dr. Lipscomb spent three years as a senior scientist in the Office of the Director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). At NIOSH, Dr. Lipscomb assisted in the development and implementation of the National Occupational Research Agenda (NORA). Prior to NIOSH, Dr. Lipscomb was an Assistant Professor at eh University of California, at San Francisco (UCSF) School of Nursing and Director of their graduate Occupational Health Nursing program. While at UCSF, Dr. Lipscomb received federal research support to develop and implement a model for integrating occupational and environmental content into baccalaureate nursing curricula. Dr. Lipscomb earned a MS in Occupational Health Nursing from the Boston University/Harvard School of Public Health and PhD in Epidemiology from the University of California at Berkeley. Her dissertation examined the Epidemiology of Symptoms Reported by Persons Living Near Hazardous Waste Sites.



