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Kathleen Long, Ph.D., R.N., F.A.A.N., dean of the
University of Florida College of Nursing, has been named the university's
associate provost. She will serve in the role on a half-time basis and will
remain dean.
Long will address policy and practice in areas such as
sabbaticals, professional accreditations, teaching requirements and clinical
practice relationships. In addition, she will help develop approaches for a
three-year, $2 million program to expand faculty educational enhancement
opportunities that UF President Bernie Machen announced last month.
Long also will help provide an interface between UF's
academic affairs office and the Health
Science Center,
and will serve as the provost's representative in universitywide efforts to
develop a new budget model.
Long has been nursing dean since 1995, holding the longest
tenure among current Health
Science Center
deans. In that time she has won national recognition as a leading thinker about
the future of the nursing profession in a rapidly changing health-care
landscape especially threatened by a shortage of nurses. She has been an
invited member of several national task forces focused on interdisciplinary
education, health professions shortage issues and patient safety.
Long has served several terms on the board of directors of
the American Association of Colleges of Nursing and was AACN's president from
2002 to 2004. She was a member of the AACN Task Force that authored "Nursing
Education's Agenda for the 21st Century."
Long received her bachelor of science in nursing degree from
Catholic University of America and her master of science in nursing in child
psychiatric/nursing education at Wayne State University. She earned her Ph.D.
in behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University. She served as dean of the
Montana
State University College of Nursing prior to coming to UF.
Long's research has focused on child and family mental
health, rural health and innovations in nursing education. She has been elected
to membership in Phi Beta Kappa as well as Sigma Theta Tau, Phi Kappa Phi and
Delta Omega. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and a life
fellow of the American Orthopsychiatric Association.