IU Home Pages - Logo   February 11, 2005  
 
Home Events FYI Headliners Health Liberal 
arts Outreach Technology Research Contact  
Conversations Viewpoint Fast facts Web mastery @ 
Work Photographer's corner Friday flashback
  Headliners
IU’s Austin first nurse to become AES president
By S.K. Kenney
Austin
Joan Austin, Distinguished Professor of nursing at IU, has been sworn in as president of the American Epilepsy Society (AES), becoming the first nurse to assume the AES presidency in the society’s 62-year history.

Austin is also director of the Center for Enhancing Quality of Life in Chronic Illness (CEQL) at the IU School of Nursing. She also holds adjunct appointments at the IU School of Medicine and Purdue University’s School of Science.

Austin’s presidency of AES, whose membership is 80 percent physician-based, marks the society’s move to create a professional home for all health-care professionals who are involved in epilepsy research and clinical care.

“Dr. Austin’s election as president is an indication that the AES is truly a multidisciplinary organization of diverse professionals dedicated to curing epilepsy and improving the lives of those afflicted by this disorder,” said Thomas Sutula, chairman, AES nominating committee. “The multidisciplinary aspects of the AES are not only reflected in its membership demographics, but also at the board level, and now at the highest level of its leadership.”

Austin’s major goal for the society during her year-long presidency will be to evaluate how AES can better meet the training needs of health-care professionals who are members of interdisciplinary teams that provide comprehensive care to persons with epilepsy. She also plans to put together a strategy for addressing the 2003 national conference “Living with Epilepsy II” recommendations to develop a comprehensive public health strategy for people living with epilepsy.

Austin, a member of the Institute of Medicine, is recognized internationally as one of only a few scientists in the area of child and family adaptation to pediatric epilepsy. Her groundbreaking research investigating family adaptation to a diagnosis of epilepsy in a child is unique. Her research has been funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke since 1986. Austin’s current research focuses on behavioral problems in children with first recognized seizures. She also is principal investigator for a study, funded by the National Institute of Nursing Research, investigating mental health and academic achievement outcomes in adolescents with chronic epilepsy.