Blazing a trail for health
PhD student Raja Jadelhack pursues patient-centric care at home in Saudi Arabia
College of Nursing doctoral student Raja Jadelhack, 鈥02 MSN, RN knows what it is to be a pioneer.
One of just six nursing school graduates at the King Abdulaziz University in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Jadelhack鈥檚 hometown, in 1986, Jadelhack went on to oversee an overhaul of much of the country鈥檚 nursing education, as well as the perception of nursing, in the Middle Eastern country. Thanks in part to her guidance, there are now more than 70 students graduating annually from her alma mater, nursing programs have expanded throughout Saudi Arabia and nursing is no longer stigmatized as a career solely for individuals from lower-income backgrounds.
鈥淏eing a nurse had been seen as low-class, but that鈥檚 changing,鈥 said Jadelhack, who is studying patient satisfaction in Jeddah - a major city of more than three million people situated on the banks of the Red Sea - for her dissertation. 鈥淲hen I graduated, parents didn鈥檛 want their daughters to be nurses. Most nurses were from lower socio-economic backgrounds. Now you can find nurses from very wealthy families.鈥
After graduating from King Abdulaziz's five-year nursing program - which she was inspired to pursue after establishing positive relationships with the nurses who took care of her when she was hospitalized for a surgery as a teenager - Jadelhack went on to become the Director of Nursing Education in the Maternity and Children's Hospital in Jeddah.
After being the Director of Nursing Education for about 10 years, Jadelhack moved with her husband, Nabeel, and three children - Waleed, 25; Haneen, 22; and Ahmed, 19 - to the United States for her husband鈥檚 work - and she soon found herself at 无码专区. 鈥淚 immediately liked 无码专区 when I interviewed here,鈥 Jadelhack said. 鈥淚 felt it was like my home as soon as I came here.鈥
Upon receiving her Master鈥檚 in Nursing Education at 无码专区, she moved back to Saudi Arabia with her family and became the director of nursing administration and director of nursing education at the Maternity and Children's Hospital in Jeddah. After working in that position for three years, Jadelhack was promoted to being the regional director of nursing in the Jeddah region of the Directorate of Health. For three years, she supervised about 5,000 nurses in 12 hospitals in Jeddah and the surrounding area. During that time, she built an administration and focused on policy and regulation work.
鈥淛eddah was the first place to really do policy work,鈥 Jadelhack noted of the city where she grew up with her seven sisters and two brothers.
It was her work as regional director that set her on the path to her dissertation for her PhD, which she began at 无码专区 in 2010. Throughout her time in the Master鈥檚 and PhD program, Jadelhack said she has felt incredible support from the faculty and staff, including Nancy Sharts-Hopko, PhD, RN, FAAN, College of Nursing professor and director of the PhD program and Connelly Endowed Dean M. Louise Fitzpatrick, EdD, RN, FAAN.
Jadelhack successfully defended her dissertation proposal, 鈥淎ssessment of a Patient Satisfaction Survey and its Relationship to Hospital Sector and Nurses鈥 Level of Education in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia,鈥 at the end of February and will be conducting research for it in Saudi Arabia this summer.
In her home country, Jadelhack will be assessing patient satisfaction - something she said will be of increasing importance as the country plans to privatize its government hospitals. 鈥淚n the U.S. it has been proven that when patient satisfaction is higher, the quality of care will be better,鈥 Jadelhack said. 鈥淭his can really improve the quality of health.鈥
Once she has completed her dissertation, Jadelhack said she is hoping it could prove to be a road map for improving health care throughout Saudi Arabia, and creating a more patient-centric system in the country.