Martha N Hill
Martha N. Hill
Dean, The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing
The Johns Hopkins University
Office of the Dean
The Johns Hopkins University
School of Nursing
525 N. Wolfe St.
Baltimore, Md. 21205
Phone: (410) 955-7544
Fax: (410) 955-4890
E-mail:
mnhill@son.jhmi.edu
Martha Hill, a Johns Hopkins faculty member since 1980,
became dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of
Nursing in July 2002 after a year as interim dean.
Hill was one of the first four faculty members to join Dean
Carol Gray when the School of Nursing was established as an
independent division of the university in 1985. Previously,
nursing education at Hopkins had occurred within another
university school or in a hospital-based school.
Hill is internationally known for developing and testing
strategies to improve hypertension care and control among
urban, underserved African-Americans, particularly young
men. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and
a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National
Academy of Sciences. She was co-vice chair of an institute
committee that developed a report titled "Unequal Treatment:
Confronting Ethnic and Racial Disparities in Health Care."
In 1997-98, she was the first non-physician to serve as
president of the American Heart Association.
At Johns Hopkins, she became director of the Center for
Nursing Research in 1994. She has served as a member and
chair of the university-wide Committee for the 21st Century
and as co-chair of the Urban Health Council , a joint
Hopkins-community committee whose work led to the
establishment of the Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute.
She holds joint faculty appointments in both the School of
Medicine and the Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Hill earned a diploma from the Johns Hopkins Hospital School
of Nursing in 1964 and graduated with a bachelor s degree in
1966 from what is now the School of Professional Studies in
Business and Education. She earned a master s in nursing
from the University of Pennsylvania in 1977 and a doctorate
in behavioral sciences in 1986 from what is now the
Bloomberg School of Public Health.
[Updated September 2006]
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