Presentations
Members of the Mennonite College of Nursing presented at the Midwest Nursing Research Society annual convention in Des Moines, Iowa. Presentations included John Blakeman with “Measuring the Lay Public’s Conceptions of Chest Pain Related to Acute Coronary Syndrome”; Susana Calderon and doctoral student Melissa Calvillo with “Prioritization and Decision-Making Among School Nurses”; Annette Hubbell with “Influences on Long-Term Physical Activity in Physically Active African American Women: A Review of the Literature”; Cherrill Stockmann and doctoral student Kate Peterson with “Exploring Well-Being of Pediatric Nurses who Care for Chronically Ill Pediatric Patients”; and Susan Watkins and Judy Neubrander with “A Primary Care Student Nurse Education Program Evaluation of self-efficacy and Performance in Disease Self-Management Support.” Stockmann also presented “A Mental Health Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) To Evaluate Undergraduate Nursing Students’ Clinical Competence.”
Katherine Ellison, ENG, presented “Secret Celebrity: Shaping the Public Image of Eighteenth-Century Spying,” at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, in St. Louis, Missouri.
Kristina Lewis, ENG, presented “TESOL Student Teacher Identity Perceptions Via Memes,” at the American Association of Applied Linguistics Conference in Portland, Oregon.
Publications
George Barnes, CHE, coauthored “A computational and experimental examination of the CID of phosphorylated serine-H +,” in Chemical Physics Letters.
Dan Lannin, PSY, coauthored the article, “Examining between- and within-person effects of the self-stigma of seeking psychological help on the therapeutic working alliance: The moderating role of psychological distress” in the journal Psychotherapy.
Christopher Mulligan, CHE, coauthored the article “Rapid Screening of High Priority N-Nitrosamines in Pharmaceutical, Forensic, and Environmental Samples with PSI-MS and FCSI-MS,” in Rapid Communcations in Mass Spectrometry.
Pica Williams, ART, authored “In Treatment,” in Big Fiction Magazine.