Edna Adan: Penn Nursing’s Inaugural Renfield Foundation Award Recipient
Newswise — Philadelphia, PA March 14, 2014 – Following an intense selection process, Edna Adan has been named the inaugural recipient of the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing Renfield Foundation Award for Global Women’s Health. Established in 2012, this award includes a $100,000 cash prize and will be presented biennially to a leader in the field of global women’s health.
The inaugural Renfield Award joins a long line of firsts for Adan. She was the first Somali girl to be awarded a scholarship to study in Britain, where she learned nursing, midwifery, and nursing management for seven years. She was the first qualified nurse-midwife in Somaliland, and later became the first lady of the country. After years of advocating for the abolition of harmful traditional practices like Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) through her work with the World Health Organization, she returned to Somaliland, where she sold all of her possessions to build the country’s first maternity hospital.
For Adan, the phone call from Penn Nursing Dean Afaf I. Meleis telling her that she had been selected to receive the Renfield Award came as she was working to secure funding to expand her hospital and care for more women and children than ever before. When she learned the news, tears welled in her eyes as she shared the Renfield Award could not have come at a better time.
The health of the people of Somaliland is among the worst in Africa, with one of the highest maternal and infant mortality rates in the world. Since opening in 2002, theEdna Adan Maternity Hospital has transformed the lives of women in Somaliland. Over 14,000 babies have been safely delivered with a maternal mortality rate one fourth of the national average and more than 300 women have undergone successful fistula repairs. The Maternity Hospital educates fully qualified healthcare professionals, and remains committed to fighting the practice of FGM.
Adan was nominated for the Penn Nursing Renfield Foundation Award by Nicholas Kristof, columnist for The New York Times and co-author of Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide. “Edna Adan has been a passionate leader not only as a hands-on nurse in Somaliland, but also in building a hospital and a training system to produce more nurses and midwives to work in remote areas across her country,” said Kristof. “She has been a tireless force to end female genital cutting in her country. The result is that largely by force of will, Edna is saving lives every day – and putting in place public health systems that will save lives for many decades to come. She’s a force of nature, and it’s a privilege to watch her in action.”
Supporting leaders like Adan remains a critical part of the mission of Penn Nursing’s Center for Global Women’s Health. Since 2009, Penn Nursing has engaged almost 1,200 people through its women’s health initiative events, which has led to extraordinary growth for the Center. One of these individuals was Jean Renfield-Miller, president of the Beatrice Renfield Foundation, the founder of the Penn Nursing Renfield Foundation Award. “The health and safety of women has far-reaching effects,” said Renfield-Miller. “This award will raise awareness of the issues facing women and girls today and encourage innovative solutions to these problems.”
In addition, Ms. Adan will receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from the University of Pennsylvania at its 2014 Commencement Ceremony.
Adan will receive the Renfield Foundation Award for Global Women’s Health and make a presentation as the final speaker at Penn Nursing’s Healthy Cities: Healthy Women – The Global Future conference on May 15, 2014. Registration for Healthy Cities: Healthy Women starts at $20 per person and proceeds from the event will benefit Penn Nursing’s Center for Global Women’s Health.
For event information and registration, please visit –http://www.nursing.upenn.edu/theglobalfuture, or contact
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