Nursing
student, longtime educator honored posthumously
by Kim Miller
As a nursing educator for 26 years, Pattie Clark’s highest goal was to
earn her doctorate from the Medical College of Georgia. That dream was
fulfilled posthumously June 7, two days after she lost a month-long battle
with pancreatic cancer.
“The field of nursing was her life and it was her light in life to get
people interested in a nursing career,” said her husband, Shawn Clark. “Her
number-one priority was the nursing profession and providing each of her
students with advice and assistance.”
Mrs. Clark graduated with her master of nursing degree from MCG in 1980
and served as a nursing educator at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in
Tifton, Ga., throughout her career.
She returned to MCG last fall to complete her doctoral dissertation,
after withdrawing from the program nine years ago to serve as primary
caregiver during her mother’s battle with cancer.
“She had always regretted not finishing her doctoral degree and it
became her top priority to return,” explained Dr. Gerald Bennett, director
of MCG’s nursing doctoral program.
While such a return was a rare request for the MCG School of
Nursing, administrators decided to reconsider Mrs. Clark as a doctoral
candidate. After a thorough review process, she was re-admitted.
“It meant everything to her and she worked hard over the last several
months updating her research,” Mr. Clark said. “In fact, she spent the week
before her diagnosis revamping her paper. She looked forward to performing
the study and getting the results.”
Mrs. Clark’s doctoral research aimed to identify factors promoting breast
self-examination for older women in rural areas, with a research interest in
health promotion and early detection behaviors. School of Nursing Dean Lucy
N. Marion served as a dissertation advisor for Mrs. Clark over the last
several months.
“Pattie was a driven, caring and smart nurse educator who was very
interested in breast cancer detection and the health behaviors that go along
with that,” Dr. Marion said. “She was so caring about the low-income people
in her area who didn’t understand how a mammogram could save their lives.”
Although her illness prevented Mrs. Clark from completing her studies,
Dr. Marion worked with Provost Barry Goldstein and School of Graduate
Studies Dean Gretchen Caughman to bestow an honorary doctoral degree for her
work.
Mrs. Clark’s co-worker and close friend for many years, Tammy Groover,
was overjoyed when she heard the news. “Achieving this goal would have been
her life’s dream come true,” she said.
Mrs. Clark inspired hundreds to pursue a nursing career, many of whom
serve the Tifton area. It comforted her that several of her former students
cared for her during her illness, her husband said.
Ironically, Hospice of Tift Area, a service of Tift Regional Medical
Center that Mrs. Clark helped establish in 1985, cared for her the day she
died. Wendy Thompson, one of her former students, was Mrs. Clark’s nurse
that morning.
“It was a privilege to be there,” Ms. Thompson said. “She was a wonderful
and loving teacher, the kind who took the time to sit down with you until
you got it. She was the type of person who could make a difficult task seem
simple so you could grasp it.”
Mrs. Clark’s compassion as a nurse and nursing educator is why students
genuinely loved her, Ms. Groover explained. “The common denominator when you
talk to her students is that she not only cared for them, she put in extra
hours to encourage them and never gave up on them. I can’t begin to describe
how loved and respected she was in the profession, community and her college
campus.”
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