Profiles

Beth NeSmith, PhD Augusta University

Beth NeSmith, PhD

Dean, College of Nursing

  • Augusta GA UNITED STATES

Dr. NeSmith's research program focuses on clinical and translational work

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Biography

Beth NeSmith, PhD, was named dean of Augusta University's College of Nursing in 2024. A faculty member since 2008, NeSmith previously served as chair of the Department of Nursing Science and program director for the Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing program.

NeSmith's research program focuses on clinical and translational work which aims to uncover and eliminate health disparities in acute outcomes of life-threatening injury. This work was inspired by NeSmith's clinical experience with vulnerable populations in emergency, trauma, and critical care settings.

Among NeSmith's publications is research which shows only 2% of injury investigations have focused on this important issue. NeSmith's work is based on the theoretical relationships proposed in the Psychoneuroimmunology and Vulnerable Populations Conceptual Frameworks. Utilizing translational research models in collaboration with a multidisciplinary research team, NeSmith's work has been funded by the National Institute for Drug Abuse and National Institute for Nursing Research. It focuses on the effects of lifetime chronic stress on inflammatory function, and how these effects impact vulnerability to sepsis and multiple organ failure. More recently, NeSmith’s work is focused on the role epigenetics plays in inflammatory processes in injury, illness, and disease.

Her research trajectory includes investigations that will add to increasing evidence supporting her theory that chronic stress creates sub-clinical physiologic changes which, when impacted by multiple life-threatening injuries, predispose clients to differences in vulnerability and response to treatment for sepsis and multiple organ failure. Her research objectives are to contribute to the development of advances in tailoring individual treatments to prevent illness and poor outcomes related to inflammatory processes and the epigenetic changes which may influence these outcomes.

Areas of Expertise

Nursing
Trauma
Emergency Medicine

Education

Medical College of Georgia

PhD

Nursing Scince

2007

Medical College of Georgia

MSN

Public Health/Community Nurse

2000

Medical College of Georgia

BSN

Registered Nursing

1988

Affiliations

  • Journal of Trauma Nursing : Editorial Board Member

Links

Media Appearances

AU provides healthcare outreach for farm workers in Trenton

WJBF  tv

2024-07-05

Faculty and students from Augusta University provided health care to nursery workers in Trenton, S.C., throughout the morning and early afternoon Friday, July 12. The worksite program, now its 19th year, brings healthcare access to agricultural workers, who are predominately Hispanic and Latino. They often face unique health challenges by nature of their work plus cultural and language barriers. “This is a wonderful initiative,” says Beth Nesmith, AU Dean of College of Nursing. “These individuals work so hard – both the farmworkers and the people helping them to provide care. The individuals work so hard, and they don’t often have access to care because they’re working, right? So, we come to them.” Common conditions for the Hispanic and Latino agricultural workers in this area includes heat and pesticide exposure/injury, animal bites, susceptibility to infectious disease, and mental illness, including depression.

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Articles

Mitochondrial N-formyl peptides cause airway contraction and lung neutrophil infiltration via formyl peptide receptor activation

Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics

2016 Respiratory failure is a common characteristic of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and sepsis. Trauma and severe blood loss cause the release of endogenous molecules known as damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs).

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The Association of Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Insurance on Trauma Mortality

Journal of Trauma Nursing

2016 Although race, socioeconomic status, and insurance individually are associated with trauma mortality, their complex interactions remain ill defined.

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An analysis of the effectiveness of a state trauma system: Treatment at designated trauma centers is associated with an increased probability of survival

Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery

2015 States struggle to continue support for recruitment, funding and development of designated trauma centers (DTCs). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the probability of survival for injured patients treated at DTCs versus nontrauma centers.

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