Brenda Cleary

Bio

Brenda L. Cleary, PhD, RN, FAAN
Dr. Cleary is currently consulting with Sigma Theta Tau International on geriatric initiatives. From 2008-2011, she served as the inaugural director of the Center to Champion Nursing in America. A joint initiative of AARP, the AARP Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, CCNA is addressing the growing nurse and nursing faculty shortage that threatens access to health care and quality of care across our nation. A consumer-driven, national force for change, the Center seeks to ensure that our country has the nurses it needs to care for all of us, now and in the future.

From 2008-2011, she served as the inaugural director of the Center to Champion Nursing in America. A joint initiative of AARP, the AARP Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, CCNA is addressing the growing nurse and nursing faculty shortage that threatens access to health care and quality of care across our nation. A consumer-driven, national force for change, the Center seeks to ensure that our country has the nurses it needs to care for all of us, now and in the future.

Dr. Cleary is an expert in healthcare workforce research and policy and for fourteen years prior to joining AARP, she held the position of Executive Director of the North Carolina Center for Nursing, a state funded agency committed to assuring nursing resources to meet the healthcare needs of the citizens of North Carolina. Dr. Cleary also served as project director for a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Colleagues in Caring) funded initiative, the NC Nurse Workforce Planning Model, as a delegate to the American Nurses Association and an elected member of the ANA Nominating Committee as well as a Magnet appraiser for the American Nurses Credentialing Center. She served as a gubernatorial appointee on the North Carolina Institute of Medicine and as an Adjunct Senior Fellow of the Duke University Center for Aging and Human Development, created a state level Health Policy Fellowship for nursing leaders and also convened and chaired the National Steering Committee of the Forum of! State Nursing Workforce Centers. She recently completed service on the Professional and Technical Advisory Committee for the Joint Commission’s Long Term Care Accreditation Process, the American Academy of Nursing Workforce Commission, and as an AARP representative on the Eldercare Workforce Alliance. She is also a member of the 2002 cohort of RWJF Executive Nurse Fellows.

Formerly, Dr. Cleary was Regional Dean and Professor at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Nursing. While at TTUHSC, she received the Excellence in Teaching Award and the President’s Academic Achievement Award. While at Texas Tech, she maintained a faculty practice as a Clinical Specialist in Geriatric Nursing in both primary and long term care settings and served as a co-investigator on a federally funded research project on management of dementia. She currently serves on the National Advisory Committees of the RWJF-funded New Graduate RN Project, the Oregon Consortium on Nursing Education evaluation project, and the Western Governors University MAP-RN initiative, and the Indiana University School of Nursing Board of Advisors. Dr. Cleary has multiple presentations and publications to her credit and received three AJN Book of the Year Awards

Dr. Cleary received a BSN and MSN from Indiana University and a PhD in Nursing from The University of Texas at Austin and was recognized as a distinguished alumna by both schools of nursing

Specialties:

  • geriatrics nursing

Affiliation:

  • Sigma Theta Tau International

Location:

Activity

  • Brenda Cleary
    Is it wrong to put my loved one with Alzheimer's disease in a nursing home?

    Taking care of a loved one with Alzheimer's disease can become a 24 hour a day endeavor. If you are in a caregiving situation that involves no relief, it may be better and safer for your loved one, and beneficial to your own health and well-being, to take advantage of round-the-clock care delivered

    ...  Full Post
  • Brenda Cleary
    How many servings of fruits and vegetables should I eat a day?

    The recommendation is 5 a Day, but often it is not reached.  And beyond the quantity, a variety of fruits and vegetables, specially green leafy vegetables, will lead to greater health benefits.  A recently launched website will help you choose wisely:

     http://www.fruitsandveggiesmatter.gov/

     Full Post