December 14, 2017

Nursing advocate set for VUSN Dean’s Diversity Lecture

Alicia Georges, EdD, a leading nursing advocate and the national volunteer president-elect of 38 million member AARP, will be the first speaker in the Vanderbilt University School of Nursing’s (VUSN) 2018 Dean’s Diversity Lecture series.

Alicia Georges, EdD, a leading nursing advocate and the national volunteer president-elect of 38 million member AARP, will be the first speaker in the Vanderbilt University School of Nursing’s (VUSN) 2018 Dean’s Diversity Lecture series.

Alicia Georges, EdD

She will present “Journey to Leadership in Nursing and Beyond: Insight for Future Nurse Leaders” on Tuesday, Jan. 9, noon-1 p.m. in VUSN’s Nursing Annex room 155. The lecture is open to the Vanderbilt community, but space is limited.

“Alicia Georges has been leading the way for nurses, particularly African-American nurses, to have a role in some of the most important health policy decisions in our country for as long as I’ve known her,” said VUSN Dean Linda Norman, DSN, the Valere Potter Menefee Professor of Nursing. “She’s an educator, scholar, practitioner and advocate. Now she represents AARP, the largest organization of Americans over 50, and has the platform to be heard on healthcare and nursing issues that will have lasting impact. I’m eager for our doctoral students to hear her talk about her path and how they can emulate her.”

In her more than 40-year career, Georges has published on diversity in nursing, health disparities and the health status of African-Americans, and leadership and African-American nurses. Before turning to academia, she was a staff nurse, team leader, supervisor and district manager for the Visiting Nurse Service of New York. Georges earned an undergraduate degree from the Seton Hall University College of Nursing, a Master of Arts in Nursing from New York University and a doctoral degree in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies at the University of Vermont.

In addition to her AARP role, Georges is professor and chair of the Department of Nursing at the School of Health Sciences, Human Services and Nursing at New York’s Lehman College and the Graduate Center at City University of New York.

She is a past president of the National Black Nurses Foundation and also serves on the advisory board of the Black Women’s Health Study and R.A.I.N. Inc. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and the New York Academy of Medicine.

The Dean’s Diversity Lecture Series was established in 2016. It explores the diversity of backgrounds, cultures, ideas and viewpoints in our world today. It seeks to equip students, faculty, staff and other community members with the knowledge and understanding needed to lead nursing forward in a global society.