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Miller ready to return
Sophomore women’s lacrosse defender looks to lead more vocally SPORTS, 15
Volume 103, Number 18
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
WWW.MARQUETTEWIRE.ORG
Female engineers College brings in largest group of women in history
Professor analyzes patient discharges Trial finds ways to prepare people to leave hospital stay
By Annie Mattea
anne.mattea@marquette.edu
With 367 women enrolled, Marquette University now has the largest group of female engineering students in its history, Julie Murphy, director for enrollment management for the College of Engineering, said. Women represent 28.18 percent of the 369 first-year students in the College of Engineering, Murphy said, with 104 women enrolled in engineering for the 2018-’19 school year. “More than ever, our world needs smart, ethical and talented engineers from all backgrounds,” Murphy said. “Women and all people from backgrounds underrepresented in engineering can contribute to positive change for people, societies and businesses by thinking of new engineering solutions to problems – and also to identify different prob-
2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper
By Emma Tomsich
emma.tomsich@marquette.edu
Photo by Jordan Johnson jordan.d.johnson@marquette.edu
Kamila Turczewski is one of the 367 women enrolled in the college.
lems that would benefit from engineering solutions.” To celebrate this milestone, the College of Engineering hosted WE are MU Night Jan. 31. It invited first-year and upperclassmen female engineers to attend. Murphy said the focus was to celebrate the success the College of Engineering
has had in encouraging women to pursue engineering at Marquette. “There are a lot of reasons why Marquette is a great place, including that we have strong women engineers as role models and several student organizations that support See FEMALE page 3
The “Readiness Evaluation and Discharge Interventions” study, led by principal investigator and professor in the Marquette College of Nursing, Marianne Weiss, was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association Network Open Jan. 25. The randomized clinical trial analyzed efficient ways for nurses to better prepare their patients for discharge and reduce future readmission rates, Weiss said. About 10 to 20 percent of patients who leave the hospital don’t feel like they’re ready to go home yet, Weiss said. These patients have trouble managing at home, they don’t feel comfortable, they’re nervous and they sometimes return to the emergency room or are readmitted to the
hospital, she said. “Our goal was to try to intervene while they were in the hospital to make that transition to home better, so that they wouldn’t need to come back to the hospital,” Weiss said. Weiss said her and her large team of nurse and economic researchers began the three-year project at the end of 2014. They collected data for 17 months and took the remainder of the time to compile the results. Before beginning their research, Weiss and her team collaborated and submitted the project for funding to the American Nurse Credentialing Center, a part of the American Nurses Association. After review, the study was selected for funding, and the ANCC as a Magnet Hospital for its exemplary nursing care were invited to participate in the project, Weiss said. In total, her research team of engaged with 33 hospitals, trained more than 1,500 nurses in study procedures and collected data from more than 200,000 patients, she said. See PATIENT page 2
Mission Week encourages community reflection Campus decorated with butterflies to represent theme By Molly Glowacki
molly.glowacki@marquette.edu
Mission Week 2019 challenged Marquette students, staff and the Milwaukee community to open themselves up in new ways through the week’s opportunities, such as listening to speakers and spending time to reflect and pray. The week started Feb. 4 and ended Feb. 10, with the
following theme: Open to your life’s purpose. The theme drew upon the anecdote of St. Ignatius sitting by the river experiencing an opening of his heart, his mind and his soul. With this new perspective, St. Ignatius understood his life’s purpose: to live God’s will, according to the Marquette Mission Week website. This year’s Mission Week symbol was butterflies, which could be seen around campus. Brigid Alba, coordinator for mission programs at the Office of Mission and Ministry, said the butterflies are a symbol for
needing to have quiet and space before opening up into something wonderful. One of the sponsors for Mission Week was the Office of Mission and Ministry, which promotes the Ignatian practices of experience, reflection, discernment and action, according to its website. Alba said Mission Week provided many events to reach out to students, faculty and staff throughout the week, and she said she believed in the opportunity to have an open, reflective
INDEX
NEWS
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
OPINIONS
Part-time student jobs
Anti-Valentine’s Day
Women in Media
CALENDAR......................................................3 MUPD REPORTS.............................................3 A&E..................................................................8 OPINIONS......................................................10 SPORTS..........................................................12
See WEEK page 2
Wages help pay for tuition, but hard to balance with studying
PAGE 5
Photo by Andrew Himmelberg andrew.himmelberg@marquette.edu
A Mission Week butterfly decorates the door of the Raynor Library.
Local MKE restaurants to hold events opposing love holiday PAGE 8
Continued sexualization of women in media demeaning PAGE 11