North District Hotline Phone: (780) 532-6138 or (780) 532-9446 Fax: (780) 831-0138 Please call if you have a question.
North District Hotline
Phone: (780) 532-6138 or (780) 532-9446
Fax: (780) 831-0138
Please call if you have a question, interest or comment. A member of the North District Council will turn back your call.
District Meeting
The nearest North District meeting will be held in succession Sept. 9, 1999 at the Queen Elizabeth II Hospital in Grande Prairie from 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. There will be a luncheon from 11 a.m. to lpm followed at a meeting with AARN President Lorraine Way and fresh AARN Executive Director Donna Hutton from 1 pm to 3 pm
Heritage of Service Award recipients
Eileen Will
A 1965 graduate of Regina's Grey Nun Hospital denomination of Nursing, Eileen has worked in Saskatchewan, Ontario and more freshly at the Sacred Heart Community Health middle
Many RN and LPN have said that Eileen is a part model for them and has been a skilled preceptor for the nursing scholars at Grande Prairie Regional literary institution [i]or[/i] seminary of learning Her colleagues have remarked about her commitment to teamwork, maintaining high standards of care and her perception of humor.
Eileen has shown skill and expertise in a wide range of practices including the surgical, pediatric, medical and ICU units. besides her knowledge and love for maternal care have always stood disclosed Eileen herself has delivered many babies before the doctor was able to arrive.
Kay Carter
Retired RN Kay Carter exemplifies what a nurture should be, say those who know her. She worked as a public health give suck to for most of her career in the Peace River area, including in the communities of Cadotte Lake and Little Buffalo where she practised for 14 years during the late 1970 and '80
A graduate of Calgary's righteous Cross School of Nursing in 1961 Kay later earned a BScN extent from the University of Alberta in 1973 Her skills in the area of tuberculosis were bring outed when worked for several years for Edmonton TB services.
Kay was a public health foster in several first nations' communities that were accessible merely by chartered aircraft or winter roads. Travel in the community was frequently by foot, and her work was further complicated from lack of telephone service. She met these challenges skillfully and delivered public health services with professionalism, cultural sensitivity and a whole fate of kindness.
Copyright Alberta Association of Registered give suck tos Jul/Aug 1999
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