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Institute of Medicine.


2005 Nurse Scholar - Jacquelyn C. Campbell, Ph.D., R.N., FAAN Print   Email


Dr. Jacquelyn Campbell is the Anna D. Wolf Chair in Nursing at the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, and an internationally-known expert in the area of domestic violence. She earned her BSN at Duke University, her MSN at Wright State University, and her PhD from the University of Rochester.  At all three universities she has been recognized as an outstanding alumnus, including being honored with the prestigious University of Rochester Distinguished Scholar Award in 1997. 

She has also been awarded Honorary Doctorates from Grand Valley State University (2001) the University of Massachusettes, Amherst (2002), and the University of Goteburg, Sweden in 2002.  Her post doctoral learning experiences and honors include the Kellogg National Leadership Fellowship (1990-93), the Bryn Mawr Summer Institute for Women in Higher Education Administration in 1992, and being a Robert Wood Johnson Urban Health Fellow in 1999-2000.  Other important honors include induction into the American Academy of Nursing in 1986, election to the Institute of Medicine in 2000, being selected as the Simon Visiting Scholar, University of Manchester (UK) 2001-02, and the 2005 American Society of Criminology Vollmer Award for research contributing to justice.

Dr. Campbell's overall research and policy initiatives are in the area of family violence and violence against women, with continuous research funding since 1984 from NIH (NINR, NIDA, NIMH), NIJ, CDC and DOD, including being Principle Investigator on three NIH, 3 CDC, 1 Department of Defense and 1 National Institute of Justice funded major research grants on battering.

Specific research areas include risk factors and assessment for intimate partner homicide, abuse during pregnancy, effects of abuse on parenting, children witnessing attempted or actual domestic violence homicide, marital rape, physical and mental health effects of intimate partner violence, prevention of dating violence and evaluation of interventions to prevent and address domestic violence. Her research results have been used as the basis of health policy recommendations to state, national and international organizations.

She has authored or co-authored more than 150 articles and chapters, mainly about battered women and family violence. She is author, co-author or editor of 6 books, Nursing Care of Survivors of Family Violence, Sanctions and Sanctuary: Cultural Perspectives on the Beating of Wives which has been updated and is now called To Have & To Hit, Assessing Dangerousness: Violence by Sexual Offenders, Batterers and Child Abusers, Ending Domestic Violence: Changing Public Perceptions/Halting the Epidemic, and Empowering Survivors of Abuse: Health Care for Battered Women and their Children, as well as the recently published Family Violence in Nursing Practice.

The collaborative nature of the research has also been a hallmark of Dr. Campbell's career.  She has continuously collaborated with domestic violence shelters and organizations, including research and policy consultations with domestic violence organizations such as the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the national office on Violence Against Women.  Her prior board and national policy memberships include 4 domestic violence shelters in Michigan, New York, and Maryland and now on the national Board of Directors of the Family Violence Prevention Fund, the Advisory Committee for the President's Family Justice Centers initiative, the National Advisory Council on Violence Against Women (US DHHS & DOJ) 1997-2000, and the congressionally appointed Department of Defense Task Force on Violence Against Women (2000-2003). 

On the national policy and research agenda setting level, she was an invited Member: US Surgeon General's (Koop) Workshop on Violence and Health in 1986, part of the AHRQ Research Agenda Setting Workshop on Domestic Violence & Health in 2001, a member of the NIH Research Agenda Setting Workshop on Children Exposed to Violence in 2002, and a reviewer of federal grant proposals starting with her membership on the NIMH Violence and Traumatic Stress Study Section (1991-96) and continuing as an Ad Hoc Reviewer at least two times each year from 1997-2005 with NIMH, NINR, NIDA, CDC and NIJ. 

On the international level Dr. Campbell is the Co-Chair of the Steering Committee for the World Health Organization "Multi-Country Study of Violence Against Women and Health Outcomes," as well as being an invited speaker to many international conferences, joining an NIH international delegation to South Africa to address issues of sexual violence and HIV transmission and collaborating with the Medical Research Council in South Africa on a number of projects.  She was also a member of the IOM Board on Global Health from 2000-05 and her current project as the Institute of Medicine Scholar in Residence is to increase the public and policy awareness and advance the research agenda of the intersection of violence against women and HIV/AIDS both internationally and in the United States.

As well as membership on the Board on Global Health and elected membership, her IOM activities include being a member on the Assessment of Family Violence Interventions Committee from 1994-1997, giving a podium address at the Annual Meeting in 1998, an invited presentation at the Workshop on Consequences of Pregnancy, Maternal Morbidity and Mortality for Women, Their Families and Society in 1998 , committee membership on Health Care Professional Training on Family Violence, an invited address to the Roundtable on Research Directions for Intimate Partner Violence in 2002 and another invited address in 2002, this time to the  Committee to Address Prevention of Intimate Partner Violence in the Military.




Last Updated: 12/20/2005, 09:20 AM RSS





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