Florence Joyce Cowan ONZM is a New Zealand midwife and educator, and an authority on pre-eclampsia. She was co-founder and director of the charity NZ Action on Pre-eclampsia, and introduced the GAP programme to monitor the growth of small babies. In 2023 Cowan was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to midwifery, after a more than fifty year career contributing to the profession.

Joyce Cowan
AwardsOfficer of the New Zealand Order of Merit
Academic background
Alma materAuckland University of Technology, Manurewa High School, Auckland University of Technology
Theses
Doctoral advisorJudith McAra-Couper, Nick Garrett, Lesley McCowan
Other advisorsLiz Smythe, Marion Hunter
Academic work
InstitutionsPerinatal Institute, Auckland University of Technology

Career

edit

Cowan trained as a registered nurse at Middlemore Hospital in Auckland, beginning in 1966, and then travelled to Dunedin, where she intended to train as a doctor.[1] However having recently met her husband-to-be, photographer John Cowan, she decided not to put her home life and family on hold for the necessary six years of training, and moved into midwifery instead.[1] Cowan completed a masters titled Women's experience of severe early onset preeclampsia: a hermeneutic analysis at the Auckland University of Technology (AUT) in 2015,[2] followed by a PhD also at AUT in 2020.[3]

Cowan is an authority on the hypertension in pregnancy, called pre-eclampsia. She co-founded and directed the charity NZ Action on Pre-eclampsia (NZ APEC) in 1994, which raises awareness among health professionals about the condition, and supports women and their families.[1][4] The NZ APEC programme is considered to have contributed to lowering the mortality rate of pre-eclampsia.[4] Cowan also introduced a programme to monitor the growth of small babies, who are at risk of stillbirth, called the GAP (Growth Assessment Programme). Cowan had heard about the programme at a conference in America, and travelled to The Perinatal Institute in Birmingham to learn about how to apply it. After the programme's successful introduction at Middlemore, ACC provided funding to roll it out nationally. It more than doubled detection of small babies in some regions.[4][1]

Before her retirement in August 2023, Cowan was a senior lecturer in the Department of Midwifery at AUT.[1][5]

Honours and awards

edit

In the 2023 King's Birthday and Coronation Honours Cowan was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to midwifery.[4]

Selected works

edit
  • Joyce Cowan; Christopher J D McKinlay; Rennae S Taylor; Jess Wilson; Judith McAra-Couper; Nick Garrett; Andrea O'Brien; Lesley McCowan (19 December 2020). "Detection of small for gestational age babies and perinatal outcomes following implementation of the Growth Assessment Protocol at a New Zealand tertiary facility: An observational intervention study". Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. doi:10.1111/AJO.13283. ISSN 0004-8666. PMID 33341930. Wikidata Q104505788.
  • Joyce Cowan (1 March 2011). "Blood tests for investigating maternal wellbeing. 6. Blood tests for investigating pre-eclampsia". The practising midwife. 14 (3): 40–46. ISSN 1461-3123. PMID 21473328. Wikidata Q83803298.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e Perry, Helen (3 October 2023). "Call the Midwife: Dr Joyce Cowan!". EastLife. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
  2. ^ Cowan, Joyce (2015). Women's experience of severe early onset preeclampsia: a hermeneutic analysis (Thesis). Tuwhera Open Access Publisher, Auckland University of Technology. hdl:10292/260.
  3. ^ Florence Cowan, Joyce (2020). Introduction of the Growth Assessment Protocol at Counties Manukau Health, New Zealand: Effect on Detection of Small for Gestational Age Pregnancy, and Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes (PhD thesis). Tuwhera Open Access Publisher, Auckland University of Technology. hdl:10292/13436.
  4. ^ a b c d "The King's Birthday and Coronation Honours List 2023 – Citations for Officers of the New Zealand Order of Merit, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (DPMC)". www.dpmc.govt.nz. 27 July 2023. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
  5. ^ Team, Times (4 June 2023). "Four named in King's Birthday and Coronation Honours". Times. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
edit