Dr. Janet Storch

Janet Storch came to the University of Victoria to serve as Director of the School of Nursing. She had previously served for nine years as a Sessional Nursing Instructor at the University of Alberta, followed by 13 years in Health Services Administration and Community Medicine. She then became Dean of Nursing at the University of Calgary for five years. Dr. Storch served as Director for five years, followed by five years in teaching and research, also serving three years as Chair of the Human Subject Research Committee at UVic. She was among numerous UVic faculty who were forced to retire in 2006. She continued to work following retirement.
Dr. Storch’s teaching and research interests were ethics in healthcare and nursing practice. Upon her arrival at UVic she was thrilled to find several faculty members who shared her interest in nursing ethics, and together they applied for and received several federal grants (SSHRC, CHSRF, CIHR) to provide ten years of funded research on nurses’ moral agency, moral distress, and moral leadership. In the latter endeavour, all Chief Nursing Executives in BC joined in the research and publication. Dr. Storch was also involved in federally-funded research on patient safety. In retirement, she joined a BC-based team on physician-assisted death.
With two nursing colleagues, she published two editions of an edited book, Toward a moral horizon: Nursing ethics for leadership and practice, and she published numerous articles with the team in key nursing journals. Her first solo publication was a book titled Patient Rights: Ethical and Legal Issues in Health Care and Nursing. Published in 1982, it was the first ethics text of its kind in Canada.
Dr. Storch held numerous offices in BC and Canada, including Chair of the Nursing Education Council of BC and the Collaborative Nursing Education Program in BC, both groups that strongly promoted a baccalaureate degree as entry to nursing practice. She also served as President of Western Region for the Canadian Association of University Schools of Nursing (CAUSN). Within BC, she served on the ethics committees of the Vancouver Island Health Region and the BC College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Nationally, Dr. Storch served as President of the Canadian Bioethics Society, spent seven years as Chair of Health Canada’s Research Ethics Board, and was an Ethics Scholar in Residence at the Canadian Nurses Association during a sabbatical leave. Over a period of 20 years she led four revisions of the CNA Code of Ethics. She was also involved with CAUSN on several task forces and she committed to eight accreditation site visits, with five of these as team leader.
Dr. Storch has been honoured with many awards, including a Robert Wood Johnston Award in 1978, the Abe Miller Memorial Nurse of the Year Award from the AARN in 1982, an Award of Distinction from RNABC in 2003, a University of Alberta Honour Award in 2004, CASN’s Ethel Johns Award in 2004, two Honorary Doctorates (from Ryerson University in 2005 and Western University in 2010) and two 1:100 Awards — one from the Canadian Nurses Association in 2008 and one from the College and Association of Registered Nurses of Alberta in 2016.