An all around cool person . . .
Her story might be instructive.
Dr. Elda G. Ramirez
“In 1978, I became a junior volunteer at Mercy Hospital in the Emergency Department. In those days, they let me do so many things! I would help with suturing and take patients all over the hospital. There was a lady one time who came in with a splint on her leg because she had dislocated her patella (kneecap). All I remember is by the time I left her room, I had her smiling through the pain. I knew I liked the energy and flow of the unexpected in the Emergency Department. The Emergency Department felt like home. I still maintain a practice as an Emergency Nurse Practitioner,” Ramírez said.
She had soon set in motion a career in Nursing that spans nursing, education, research... and now being named TAMIU’s new Dean of the College of Nursing and Health Sciences after a national search.
“I moved to Houston a week after graduating from St. Augustine High School and started my pre-nursing at the University of Houston. Once I received my BSN (1988), I worked in the intensive care units and was back in the emergency department within three years. After having some minor leadership roles, I noted that nurse practitioner programs were growing across the country.
“I was independent as a nurse, so being a nurse practitioner would be my next endeavor. Once I finished my NP program, I wanted to go back to the emergency department, but no one would take me. The NP role was very new, though it had been around since 1965. In 1993 when I completed my MSN as an FNP it was still not well understood, especially in emergency departments.
“I landed my first job as an NP in the Emergency Department at University Hospital in San Antonio and loved every minute of it. When I started this dream job, I realized I was very deficient in my knowledge since I was a family nurse practitioner. My training did not prepare me as a nurse practitioner in the emergency department.
“In 1994, the Dean at UT Health Science Center School of Nursing in Houston, Dr. Patricia Starck, remembered me because I used to take care of her mom in the Emergency Department and asked if I was willing to start the first emergency nurse practitioner program in the nation. There was an opportunity with the Department of Emergency Medicine to staff and develop this. I never ever dreamed that I would be an academic... it was the furthest from my personal goals or journey. I wanted to work in the emergency department so badly and wanted to go back to Houston, so I took the leap. The PhD was a must, and I completed it in 2006,” she explained.