Published Sept. 20, 2018
               Kitty DeGree School of Nursing hosted its inaugural White Coat Ceremony, a rite of
                  passage to emphasize the importance of compassionate patient care at the very start
                  of training.
               
Lauren Welch, a senior nursing student and Student Nursing Association officer delivered
                  the invocation. In her speech, she reminded students 鈥測ou are transitioning from typical
                  college students to taking on the role of a professional nursing student 鈥 you will
                  now be held to higher standards within the school, clinical facilities, and the community.鈥
               
               
               
Dr. Wendy Bailes, Interim Director of Kitty DeGree School of Nursing, in speaking
                  with the students and families, reminded students that in this age of social media
                  and texting, they will learn the power of communicating face to face with people as
                  they establish a continuous bond of trust with their patients.
               
Sixty-one new students recited an oath to patient care.
               
Students came forward during the ceremony to be 鈥渃loaked鈥 by their semester one faculty
                  (Sandy Bailey, Sandra Ogg, Kathy Davenport, Vonda Boone, Katherine Dixon, Kim Allen)
                  before family and friends in the iconic white coat that signifies their status as
                  healthcare professionals.
               
The keynote speech was given by DeeDee Cook, BSN, RN (1986 alumnus)
               
Cook challenged students to set their standards high as they moved through their education
                  and beyond graduation. She encouraged them to be lifelong learners in the ever changing
                  healthcare field.
               
The White Coat Ceremony was initiated in 1993 at Columbia University Vagelos College
                  of Physicians & Surgeons by Arnold P. Gold, MD, who was a professor and pediatric
                  neurologist. Dr. Gold, a passionate advocate for humanistic healthcare, believed that
                  the oath taken by new physicians at the end of medical school came too late. Through
                  the nonprofit organization that he and his wife, Dr. Sandra Gold, started, The Arnold
                  P. Gold Foundation has expanded the White Coat Ceremony around the globe.
               
Funding for Kitty DeGree School of Nursing鈥檚 inaugural ceremony was provided by the
                  Gold Foundation through the generous support of its trustee and donor Elaine Adler.
                  Kitty DeGree School of Nursing was among 50 nursing schools selected in 2018 to launch
                  their first White Coat Ceremony.
               
Today, nearly every medical school in the United States, hundreds of nursing schools,
                  and many other health profession schools around the globe participate in this tradition
                  of humanistic care.
               
鈥淭he trust and communication created with a patient is a defining factor in the path
                  to healing,鈥 said Dr. Richard Levin, President and CEO of The Gold Foundation. 鈥淭he
                  White Coat Ceremony reinforces the importance of a deep human connection as students
                  begin their journey to patients and modern healthcare.鈥
               
The Gold Foundation champions the human connection in healthcare. The foundation engages
                  schools and their students, health systems, companies, and individual clinicians in
                  the joy and meaning of humanistic healthcare, so that patients and their families
                  can be partners in collaborative, compassionate and scientifically excellent care.
               
For more information about the White Coat Ceremony and the Gold Foundation, visit
                  www.gold-foundation.org.