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Barbara Belle MacFarlane

895

Bold Points

2x

Nominee

1x

Finalist

Bio

I grew up as the youngest of six children of a single mother suffering from borderline personality disorder, alcoholism, and depression. I used to say these words in shame, but now speak them with pride for I know I have successfully overcome the odds that were set to defeat me. I obtained my first undergraduate degree at Rice University (Class of 2016) where I double majored in Psychology and Kinesiology and ranked among the top 10% of students on the President’s Honor Roll. In addition to a double curriculum, I was a top performer on the NCAA Division 1 Track & Field team. I graduated with a 4.0 GPA as a member of Phi Beta Kappa and held multiple conference and national titles in the sport of track & field. Optimal organization skills and focused dedication were imperative during this time to achieve both my academic and athletic goals. After a year of research for the Center for Translational Injury Research (CeTIR) at UTHealth McGovern Medical School, I returned to academia to complete my Bachelor of Science in Nursing. I completed the UTHealth School of Nursing Pacesetter BSN program with a 4.0 GPA and entered my nursing career in the Thoracic Surgical ICU at CHI Baylor St. Luke’s Hospital, where I fell in love with medicine. I felt the urge to dive deeper into biochemistry, pharmacology, and physiology to understand the inner workings of human beings. In just under two years of nursing, I was accepted to the UTHealth School of Nursing Doctor of Nursing Practice in Nurse Anesthesia. Upon completion of this program, I will become a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist - a role that satisfies my highly-driven and compassionate personality by allowing me to care for patients who are experiencing some of the most difficult moments of life. My ultimate goal in my nursing career is to gain as much experiential knowledge as possible and return to academia as a professor. Through my passion in teaching, I hope to deliver vital nursing knowledge and skills to future nurses in a memorable fashion so that my mistakes and victories will continue to shape the future of nursing.

Education

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
2020 - Present
  • Majors:
    • Nurse Anesthetist

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Bachelor's degree program
2017 - 2018
  • Majors:
    • Nursing Science

Rice University

Bachelor's degree program
2012 - 2016
  • Majors:
    • Kinesiology and Exercise Science

Rice University

Bachelor's degree program
2012 - 2016
  • Majors:
    • Psychology, General

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

  • Graduate schools of interest:

  • Transfer schools of interest:

  • Majors of interest:

  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Medicine

    • Dream career goals:

      Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist, University Professor

    • Registered Nurse ICU

      CHI Baylor St. Lukes
      2018 – 20202 years

    Sports

    Track & Field

    Varsity
    2009 – 20167 years

    Awards

    • Conference Champion
    • C-USA All Academic Team
    • C-USA Scholar Athlete of the Year
    • Rice University Scholar Athlete of the Year

    Research

    • Trauma

      CeTIR UTHealth — Research Assistant
      2016 – 2017

    Public services

    • Volunteering

      Healing Circles Houston — Administrative coordinator
      2016 – 2018

    Future Interests

    Advocacy

    Politics

    Volunteering

    Philanthropy

    Entrepreneurship

    Bold Moments No-Essay Scholarship
    I'm 24 years old and I've never truly done anything that I've wanted to do. Twelve years of gymnastics, seven years of track & field, four years of psychology and sports medicine at Rice University, and 15 months at UTHealth School of Nursing has barely left me room to breath, let alone travel. So here I am, one day into my 32 day road trip - hopping national parks out to LA then back to Houston. I'm writing by headlamp and I just took a naked solar shower out in the wilderness. So I say day one is a success.
    Frontline Heroes Nursing Grant
    During my undergraduate at Rice University, I took several classes directed at becoming a physician. I had the opportunity to shadow multiple physicians in the ICU during my senior year and what I found was unfortunate and discouraging. These doctors were spending minutes, if not seconds with their patients and 90% of their remaining time was spent behind a computer trying to decide what test to do. Though I knew that I could chose my own destiny in what type of physician I wanted to be, I was so turned off by this experience and began to consider alternative careers that were focused more on what to do FOR the patients. Before this experience I thought that nursing was a step down from being a physician but I soon realized that nursing is actually a step up. Nursing provides more focus on the type of care that I believe fosters healing and genuine recovery for patients. I think nursing teaches us more of what we can do FOR patients and I believe this type of care is on the rise in the medical field. I believe the role of physicians will become obsolete in the future if they continue to focus solely on new technology and tests to run. That’s the type of job that can be programmed into a computer. It’s the compassion and care of nurses that can never be replaced by a computer and since becoming a bedside ICU nurse, I have found this evermore true. My proudest moment as a nurse thus far has been receiving an award that exactly represents my purpose for becoming a nurse. I recently received the DAISY Award that honors skillful and compassionate nurses. The nomination that led to this award was written by a mother whose daughter landed in my ICU via air transport for an emergent post-surgical complication. In her nomination, she thanked me for not only providing optimal medical care, but for giving her daughter a sense of safety in one of the most uncertain times in her life. Her daughter had just received a college scholarship for softball and she broke down in tears with worry that her collegiate dreams would come to an end as her physical health declined. This was a moment where she didn't need a nurse or a doctor, but a friend and mentor. I listened through her concerns and offered my story of struggle through my own drastic injury that risked by collegiate athletic scholarship. In this moment, I may not have been restoring her physical health, but I was healing. This is the moment where I realized the beauty of holistic healing and how much this type of nursing has to offer to suffering patients. Months passed since this experience before I received a DAISY award and I thought of how many other lives that I may have impacted in the same way. An overwhelming since of joy and pride flooded through me as I realized that I was accomplishing the type of care that I set out to provide when I decided to become a nurse. I wasn't a doctor behind a computer, but a nurse at the front line of a patient's disaster. I have so much more to offer.