Meeting the Moment, Together
Health care continues to evolve in complex and urgent ways, creating new challenges for patients, families, communities, and the professionals who serve them. At the University of Washington School of Nursing, those challenges are a call to action.
Across our Seattle, Tacoma, and Bothell campuses, students, faculty, researchers, staff, alumni, and partners are advancing knowledge, preparing the next generation of nurse leaders, strengthening communities, and improving health outcomes. Together, they are shaping the future of nursing through care, innovation, and service.
By the Numbers
Seattle, Bothell, and Tacoma Campuses
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Degrees Awarded
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Student Scholarships
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Amount Research Funded
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Partnerships with Clinical Sites
A Year in Photos
A look back at the highlights, milestones, and everyday moments that defined the 2025–26 academic year.
Strategic Areas of Impact
This year, the UW School of Nursing established five strategic priorities to guide its mission and future growth. This report highlights accomplishments aligned with four externally facing priorities, showcasing the impact of our faculty, staff, students, and partners across our Seattle, Bothell, and Tacoma campuses.
Explore the categories below to learn more about our collective impact through key moments from the past year.
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Innovating Research and Educational ProgramsInnovating Research and Educational Programs
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Promoting a Dynamic Learning Environment for Student Success and Professional DevelopmentPromoting a Dynamic Learning Environment for Student Success and Professional Development
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Advancing Equity, Belonging and Community ImpactAdvancing Equity, Belonging and Community Impact
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Cultivating and Strengthening Strategic Partnerships and Community EngagementCultivating and Strengthening Strategic Partnerships and Community Engagement
Community Impact Through Philanthropy and Alumni Engagement

The UW School of Nursing raised $5.5 million from more than 720 donors, supporting student scholarships, faculty excellence, and key priorities across the School.
During Husky Giving Day, more than $79,000 was raised from 70 donors for the Fathi Family Student Emergency Fund — including a $50,000 match — providing critical support for students facing financial hardship and helping them continue their nursing education and remain focused on their academic and professional goals.
Alumni and donors also engaged through a range of events, including Dawg Dash, the Western Institute of Nursing (WIN), Nurses of Influence, the Health Promotion Lecture, and the All-Class Reunion, strengthening connection and engagement across the School community and creating opportunities for connection, learning, and celebration of nursing impact.
Alum Spotlight: Elizabeth Bridges, 2025 Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award Recipient
UW School of Nursing alumna Elizabeth Bridges is the recipient of the 2025 Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award. A retired Air Force colonel and critical care nurse, Bridges has led groundbreaking global research in military and disaster nursing, shaping trauma care practices and clinical standards used worldwide. Her decades of leadership in both military and academic settings reflect a sustained commitment to improving outcomes for critically ill and injured patients across diverse and high-acuity environments. She was also featured in UW Magazine for her global impact and leadership in military and critical care nursing.
Student Excellence in Action
Across degree levels — BSN, MN, MS, DNP, and PhD — UW School of Nursing students in Seattle, Tacoma, and Bothell are rising to the moment with purpose, skill, and compassion. Through research, clinical practice, community-based learning, and global experiences, they are examining bias in educational materials, leading quality improvement initiatives, advancing equity in nursing education, and developing new approaches to healthy aging, mental health, and cognition. Their work reflects a community of emerging nurse leaders who are not only preparing for the profession, but already contributing to it — meeting today’s challenges with curiosity, rigor, and a deep commitment to the people and communities they serve.
A Future Nurse Scientist
BSN student Julia Lee, a 2026 UW President’s Medalist, is combining nursing and research through her work on dementia-inclusive community programming for people experiencing memory loss.
From Advocacy to Systems Leadership
DNP student David Drew is charting a path at the intersection of AI and health equity. Selected as graduate student speaker at the King County Nurses Association scholarship gala and as a RAIN Summit ambassador, Drew is bringing justice and innovation to the forefront of nursing’s future.
Music, Memory, and Dementia-Inclusive Care
Sarah McKiddy, PhD student in Nursing Science at the UW School of Nursing, is advancing interdisciplinary research on music-based memory loss programming and dementia-inclusive care through community-partnered scholarship.

This year, the UW School of Nursing Simulation Center earned the INACSL (International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning) Healthcare Simulation Standards Endorsement™, a nationally recognized distinction awarded to programs demonstrating excellence in evidence-based simulation education and consistent application of the Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice®.
Faculty and Staff Accomplishments
Faculty and staff across the UW School of Nursing advance the mission through leadership, discovery, teaching, and service at local, national, and global levels. This year’s accomplishments reflect a community committed to improving health and healthcare systems across all three campuses.
From awards and fellowships to leadership roles and innovations in education and practice, these highlights represent just a few of the many recognitions across the School this year.
Faculty Honors & Appointments
Avanti Adhia – Selected for the UW Research Impact Advocates program to strengthen public communication and broader engagement of nursing research, and named a Dean’s Fellow for Strategic Priorities.
Nicole Ardres – Recipient of the UW School of Nursing DAISY Nurse Educator Award, recognizing excellence in nursing education and outstanding commitment to student learning and mentorship.
Suha Ballout – Named Fellow of the Academy of Diversity Leaders in Nursing, Fellow of the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education (NADOHE), recipient of the ANF Health Equity Educator Award, and appointed the Ellery and Kirby Cramer Endowed Professor, recognizing national leadership in advancing equity, inclusion, and justice in nursing education and practice.
Betty Bekemeier – Honored with the Friends of the National Institute of Nursing Research Path Paver Award and featured in national policy dialogue for leadership in public health nursing and disaster preparedness research.
Basia Belza – Recognized alongside PhD candidate Sarah McKiddy for innovative music and memory research supported by The Music Man Foundation, advancing interdisciplinary approaches to healthy aging.
Elizabeth Bridges – Received the AACN Marguerite Rodgers Kinney Award for a distinguished career in critical care nursing and the Distinguished Alumni Veterans Award (DAVA) for global military medicine leadership.
Kelly Brewer – Selected for the University Psychedelic Education Program Faculty Fellowship to advance curriculum development in emerging therapeutic areas.
Eeeseung Byun – Selected as a 2025 Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing in recognition of contributions to nursing science, education, and policy.
Kristen Childress – Recipient of the UW School of Nursing Sandra Eyres Excellence in Graduate Teaching Award; selected to participate in the End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC) program to advance palliative care education; and inducted as a Fellow of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners.
Maya Elias – Selected as a 2026 IMPACT Faculty Scholar focused on Alzheimer’s and dementia research through embedded pragmatic clinical trials.
Jan Flowers – Honored with UW’s Excellence in Global Engagement Award for leadership in global digital health systems and workforce development across 80+ countries.
Katie A. Haerling – Named a 2025 Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing for contributions advancing nursing education and practice.
Jonika Hash – Recipient of the UW School of Nursing Nursing Research Mentorship Award, recognizing excellence in mentoring and supporting emerging nurse scientists.
Omeid Heidari – Named a Dean’s Fellow for Behavioral Health. He also received the Excellence in Promoting Diversity through Teaching Award.
Sarah Iribarren – Selected for the University Psychedelic Education Program Faculty Fellowship to advance curriculum development in emerging therapeutic areas.
Rebecca O’Connor – Inducted as a 2025 Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and featured in Nursing Outlook for contributions to nurse leadership in policy and health system innovation.
Michelle Shin – Named a Dean’s Fellow for Strategic Priorities.
Jamie Shirley – Received the 2026 King County Nurses Association Shining Star Award for her leadership in nursing practice, ethics, social justice, and professional advocacy.
Jennifer T. Sonney – Received the NAPNAP President’s Award and Loretta C. Ford Distinguished Nurse Practitioner Award for national leadership in pediatric nursing practice and policy.
Christine Stevens – Named 2026 Martin Luther King Jr. Community Service Tribute Award recipient for community-engaged work addressing food insecurity and health inequities.
Megan Streur – Appointed Undergraduate Program Director for the UW School of Nursing; Inducted as a 2025 Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and elected Fellow of the American Heart Association recognizing leadership in cardiovascular nursing research and curriculum advancement.
Irene Swanberg – Recipient of the UW School of Nursing Excellence in Clinical Teaching Award, recognizing outstanding contributions to clinical education and student learning.
Hilaire Thompson – Appointed Chair of the Board of Health Sciences Deans, reflecting leadership across UW Health Sciences and commitment to interdisciplinary collaboration.
Mikhai Wickline – Recipient of the UW School of Nursing Rheba de Tornyay Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award; selected to participate in the End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC) program focused on strengthening palliative care education.
Brenda Kaye Zierler – Recipient of the Carlos De La Pena Award for Excellence in Clinical and Translational Science for leadership in team science and research collaboration.
Oleg Zaslavsky – Honored with the Distinguished Researcher Award at the Nurses of Influence ceremony for his pioneering work in digital health technologies to improve care and outcomes for older adults and individuals living with dementia.
Grants and Research Funding
Maria Bleil received a $3.2 million R01 from the National Institute on Aging to examine the developmental pathways — including puberty — that shape life course risk for disease in females, contributing to a deeper understanding of how early biological experiences influence long-term health outcomes.
Kendra Kamp received her first R01 award of $3.9 million from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases to investigate how the menstrual cycle influences systemic and GI-specific inflammation and patient-reported outcomes in women living with inflammatory bowel disease — an underexplored area with significant implications for how we understand and treat this condition in female patients.
Jillian Pintye received a five-year K24 mentoring award from NINR dedicated to advancing syphilis screening and treatment for mothers and infants, while simultaneously cultivating the next generation of scientists committed to maternal and infant health equity.
Megan Streur received an R21 award of $308,000 from NINR to evaluate the Community Heart Failure Program, a community-based, nurse-led disease management initiative that provides care to patients facing adverse social determinants of health, including unstable housing and poverty.
Oleg Zaslavsky received Amazon’s Cross-Pacific AI (X PAI) Award for AI-driven early detection of pneumonia in older adults, a $2.5 million NIH R01 grant to advance frailty care interventions, and a second R01 of $3.7 million to reduce depression among family caregivers of persons living with Lewy body dementia — recognizing the profound and often invisible toll that caregiving places on families navigating this complex disease.
The UW School of Nursing Simulation Center was recognized as a 2026 Husky Sustainability Award winner for dramatically reducing waste in clinical training. By repurposing materials from UW Medicine, repackaging student-used supplies between quarters, and refining purchasing practices, the Sim Center cut waste by 90% — all while maintaining high student satisfaction. The initiative has become a national model for sustainability in nursing simulation education.
A Message from Executive Dean Hilaire Thompson

This year has been defined by our commitment to care that meets the moment — care that responds to evolving needs in our communities, advances innovation in education and research, and reflects the urgency and humanity of the work before us.
These key moments reflect more than individual accomplishments. Together, they show a community that continues to show up for people at their most vulnerable, to pursue questions that matter, and to build a healthcare system worthy of everyone it serves.
We are grateful you are part of this community, and we hope you will stay close to what we are building together.
Stay Connected
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Explore our programs — nursing.uw.edu/academic
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Hilaire J. Thompson, PhD, RN, ARNP, FAAN
Professor and Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Executive Dean
University of Washington School of Nursing