In Review

Loretta Ford, founding dean of the School of Nursing, will be honored for her legacy this fall when she is one of 11 inductees into the National Women鈥檚 Hall of Fame.
From her home in Wildwood, Fla., Ford, who is now 90, acknowledges that the magnitude of the honor hasn鈥檛 quite sunk in yet. She鈥檚 鈥渂een overwhelmed by the outpouring of good wishes鈥 from people across the country, especially former colleagues and current faculty and staff at the Medical Center and the School of Nursing, which she led from 1972 to 1985.
Ford鈥檚 nearly 50-year career transformed the nursing profession and the delivery of health care itself. She codeveloped the nurse practitioner role at the University of Colorado in 1965 and at Rochester, and implemented the unification model of education, practice, and research, which connects the classroom to real-world experience. It鈥檚 an approach now replicated by nursing programs across North America.
There was a 鈥渕arriage of education and practice that was vital to nursing,鈥 Ford says. 鈥淩ochester had the philosophy and the interdisciplinary aspects needed to develop a team approach and a system that was receptive and responsive to new ideas.鈥
Ford will be inducted during ceremonies in Seneca Falls, N.Y.鈥攂irthplace of the American Women鈥檚 Rights Movement鈥攐n September 30 and October 1. For more information, visit www.greatwomen.org.
鈥擟hristine Roth
Christine Roth covers nursing education and research for the Medical Center Public Relations and Communications Office.