Intercollegiate College of Nursing

News Releases

November 3, 2003

Pie-in-the-Face Event to Raise Money for College of Nursing Student with Leukemia

(Spokane, Wash): The Washington State University Intercollegiate College of Nursing Associated Intercollegiate Nursing Student (AINS) organization is hosting a Pie-in-the-Face event Nov. 7, to raise money for a fellow student battling leukemia.

Classmates at the College of Nursing are hoping to raise $1,000 to help, Maureen “Mo” Carr, a fifth semester undergraduate nursing student who was diagnosed with Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia in March 2002. Although Carr is being treated for the cancer, she has yet to move into complete remission. A costly $235,000 bone marrow transplant is the only curative treatment that will eradicate the chromosome mutation. Carr must raise the $35,000 not covered by insurance.

A Wenatchee resident, Carr is receiving assistance from the National Transplant Assistance Fund (www.transplantfund.org), a national organization dedicated to education and assistance for individuals involved with organ, tissue and bone marrow transplantation and families of catastrophic injury victims. Among other benefits, NTAF offers direct financial assistance in the form of $1,000 challenge grants to eligible candidates, which Carr has received.

AINS President and event coordinator Jacqui Pegen has established ticket collection jars to determine which faculty and AINS officers will get a pie-in-the-face. Tickets are being sold for $1 each and AINS is also collecting direct cash donations on behalf of Carr. The five containers with the most tickets will be eating a pie of their choice at noon on Friday, Nov. 7. The event will be staged in the main hallway at the College of Nursing campus located at 2917 W. Fort George Wright Drive in Spokane.

“AINS is designed to support our students in whatever way possible,” said Pegen. “When we found out about Mo, we wanted to help. We thought that a “pie-in-the-face” fundraiser would be a perfect way to increase internal and external awareness about Mo’s condition and other leukemia patients who may be facing a similar challenge.”

Carr, who is planning to graduate in December, is touched but not surprised by the support from her classmates. “The end of the semester fundraiser signifies the commitment of support, camaraderie, caring and investment that my peers and mentors are moved to show to me during this difficult and unpredictable time. While I am aware that most of my classmates will be job hunting and planning relocations after graduating in the next few months, my plans for the future include the bone marrow transplant, hopefully in December.”

Carr’s plans do include learning as much as possible about oncology nursing through personal experience and mentorship in a local internship program. “I plan to return to the College of Nursing in three years to begin my master’s degree studies in the nurse practitioner program.”

Established in 1968, the Intercollegiate College of Nursing/WSU College of Nursing is the nation's first, oldest and most comprehensive nursing education consortium. The College of Nursing offers baccalaureate, graduate and professional development course work to nursing students enrolled through its four consortium partners: Eastern Washington University, Gonzaga University, Washington State University and Whitworth College. Each year, the college educates more than 650 graduate and upper-division undergraduate students and prepares more entry-level nurses than any other educational institution in the state. For more information about the Intercollegiate College of Nursing/WSU College of Nursing, visit the college Web site at nursing.wsu.edu.

 

Intercollegiate College of Nursing, 2917 W Ft George Wright Dr, Spokane, WA, 99224-5291, 509-324-7360, Contact Us