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PUBLIC INFORMATION
AND EDUCATION
Keeping you informed of
events, news and resources
concerning Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: |
January 24, 2006
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615.532.6597 (Office)
615.406.5523 (Cell)
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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NURSING
HONORS
COMMISSIONER BETTS AND THREE COLLEAGUES FOR THEIR
MENTAL HEALTH LEADERSHIP ROLES
NASHVILLE—The January 2006 issue of the American Journal of Nursing,
the official journal of the American Nurses Association, recognizes the
Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities (TDMHDD)
Commissioner Virginia Trotter Betts along with three members of her professional
nurse staff, as leaders in the mental health field.
Commissioner Betts, Frieda Hopkins Outlaw, Candace Gilligan and Lynn
McDonald are featured in their roles in fighting the stigma of mental
illness and promoting treatment options on behalf of people often considered
the most voiceless of our nation’s citizens. A major component for
overall good health, mental health is often overlooked and misunderstood
by the general public. Nurses have been long regarded as having an extremely
important role in patient and consumer health care.
“The opportunity to bring knowledge to the public is critical,”
said Commissioner Betts in the article. “So much of what I’ve
accomplished in life, I learned in Nursing 101—being a nurse gives
one the absolute best perspective.”
In the TDMHDD, Candace Gilligan oversees psychiatric and substance abuse
services funded through Medicaid’s Managed Care program; Lynn McDonald
is the first nurse chief officer of the Middle Tennessee Mental Health
Institute; and Freida Hopkins Outlaw, a child and adolescent specialist,
serves as the assistant commissioner for the Office of Special Populations
and Minority Services. As a collective, the four bring different strengths
to their positions, and they all trust each other’s wisdom in setting
policy, managing the business of mental health care, and providing input
for continued success in assuring that quality services are established
and maintained statewide. Tennessee is well served and well represented
by these four professional nurse leaders.
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