Fran M LewisPh.D., MSN, MA, BSN
Professor
Child, Family, and Population Health Nursing
The UW Medical Center Endowed Professor in Nursing
Affiliate, Public Health Sciences Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
I bring over 25 years of experience in describing, statistically modeling, and designing behavioral interventions aimed at enhancing the well-being of patients, caregivers, and dependent children within families. My work began in the 1980s with large-scale, longitudinal studies involving hundreds of families affected by serious medical illnesses in mothers, including the testing of theoretical models for family members’ adjustment.
My current research focuses on families dealing with advanced-stage cancers in either parent, and how to support these families in thriving both individually and collectively. Additionally, I am involved in training and evaluation programs in Eastern and Central Europe, which aim to enhance the capacity of medical care workers to alleviate symptom burdens and improve quality of life, even in the context of advanced cancer and limited pharmacological options.
- Ph.D., Stanford University, 1977
- M.A., Stanford University, 1974
- M.N., Stanford University, 1973
- M.N., University of Washington, 1968
- B.S.N., Loretto Heights College, 1967
- NMETH 499: Undergraduate Research
- NMETH 591: The Science of Therapeutics: Design and Outcomes
- NMETH 595: Designing a Theory-Driven Behavioral Intervention
- NMETH 610: Research Practicum
- NSG 551: Health Politics and Policy
- NSG 555: Perspectives on Implementing Research in Advanced Nursing Practice
- NURS 589: Theoretical Perspectives in Nursing
- NURS 599: Selected Readings in Nursing Science
- NURS 610: Teaching Practicum
- , National Institute of Nursing Research
- Enhancing Connections-Palliative Care: A Cancer Parenting Program for Patients with Advanced Cancer and Their Children, National Institute of Nursing Research
- African American Families Fighting Parental Cancer Together, University of Delaware
- , University of Delaware