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Dr. Koenig is an Assistant Professor at the Yale School of Nursing in the Adult Family Women's Health and Gerontology Nurse Practitioner Specialty. She is a Family Nurse Practitioner with extensive clinical experience in private and community family health care settings. Her research and publications concern low-income African-American and Latino infants and toddlers with severe asthma and the illness management practices of their families. She has presented her work in national and international forums to nurses as well as professionals in related family disciplines. She serves the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America in training day care providers about the prevention and management of asthma in the day care setting. Dr. Koenig earned her B.S. in Nursing at Columbia University, her Certificate as a Family Nurse Practitioner at the University of California, Davis, and her Masters and PhD degrees in Nursing at the University of California, San Francisco.
Family management of infants and toddlers at high risk for asthma; and the primary care management of chronic illness in individuals and families at high risk for asthma, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia.
Stamford Medicine Associates, P.C.
Koenig, K. (2006). Families discovering asthma in their high risk infants and toddlers with severe disease. Journal of Family Nursing,
12(1),56-79.
Koenig, K., (2004). Asthma Management Among Low-Income Latino and African American Families of Infants and Toddlers. Journal of
Family Relations, 53(1), 58-67.
Koenig, K., (2003). Parents' Perspectives of Asthma Crisis Hospital Management In Infants and Toddlers: An Interpretive View Through the Lens of
Attachment Theory. Journal of Pediatric Nursing, 18(4), 233-243.
Koenig, K. Parents' perspectives on challenges in managing persistent asthma in low income high risk infants and toddlers. Pediatric Nursing (in press).
Paper Presentation: Low-Income Latino and African-American Parents' Perceptions of Health Care Providers During Emergency and Hospital Care of their Infants and Toddlers with Severe Persistent Asthma, International Qualitative Health Research Conference, April 6, 2002.
Session Discussant, Middle and Later Adulthood: Adjustment to Life Events and Illness, National Council on Family Relations, November 11, 2001.
Poster Presentation, American Thoracic Society, International Conference, May 18-22, 2001.
Paper Presentation, Parents' Accounts of Children's Acute Asthma Crisis Among Low-Income Latino and African-American Infants and Toddlers, International Family Nursing Conference, July 20, 2000.
Paper Presentation, Management Practices of Poor Latino and African-American Infants and Toddlers With Severe Persistent Asthma, National Conference on Family Relations, November 14, 1999.
Paper Presentation, Controlling Crisis in Poor Latino and African-American Infants and Toddlers with Severe Persistent Asthma: An Interpretive Study of Families' Management Practices, Valley Children's Hospital Grand Rounds, Valley Children's Hospital, Fresno, CA, October 21, 1999.
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