Andrea Karlin

is
honored by her family
Although she came to Oregon a hundred years after the pioneering women who came
in covered wagons, Andrea Karlin was a pioneer in her own right. Moving west in
her mid-twenties, she raised five children, held leadership roles in volunteer
organizations, managed two shops that raised funds for Jewish organizations, and
became the first in her family to graduate from college. As if that were not
enough, she went on to develop an innovative nursing care model for seniors in
Northwest Portland. She has led the way for many to follow, and her family,
including her husband, five children, nine grandchildren and
great-grandchild, honor her as one of Portland's heroines.
Born in Toledo, Ohio, to parents with deep roots in New England, Andrea grew up
in Cleveland during the Depression. Since college was not an option financially,
she decided to pursue nursing. She spent the summer after high school working
to earn funds for tuition and entered Mt. Sinai School of Nursing in Cleveland
in 1942.
After earning her RN, she stayed on at Mt. Sinai as a unit head nurse. While
she was working as a private duty nurse, one of her patients, a young woman with
liver disease, introduced Andrea to her older brother. Recently returned from
WWII service in England, he was a student at Harvard Law School. After
graduation from law school, he practiced briefly in Cleveland, and then moved to
Portland. She soon followed him to Portland, they married, and by mid-1957 they
had five children.
Other than the day-to-day needs of the growing family (which were significant!),
she did not work as a nurse during these years. However, she volunteered and
held leadership roles as treasurer of Congregation Beth Israel's Sisterhood and
president of Portland Chapter of Hadassah. While volunteering for Hadassah, she
improved its resale shop by expanding the location, improving the lighting
and customer service, and creating a side business in selling fabric as rags
and books by-the-pound to recycling companies. She also re-energized the gift
shop at Congregation Beth Israel, making it a shop of choice for Judaica and
gifts.
As her children began leaving for college, she decided to go back to school
herself, to Linfield College's off-campus Bachelor of Science in Nursing
program. She graduated in 1977, with her family, including her first
grandchild, in attendance.
Familiar with Northwest Portland from her many years of volunteering
at Congregation Beth Israel, she realized that many seniors lived in the area.
While they preferred to live independently, many were unable to do
so without nursing care. They needed help with such needs as foot care, insulin
shots, wound care, and blood pressure monitoring. Recognizing that a senior
center and Loaves/Fishes in a nearby church already drew many seniors, she
founded Northwest Neighborhood Nurses to provide nursing care in the same
building.
Under her leadership, NNN innovated in providing warm, compassionate care,
managed and delivered by nurses, for nearly 15 years. Local foundations helped
with funding. Doctors, dentists, hospitals, and churches and synagogues in the
area were supportive, serving on the board and contributing funds, supplies and
equipment. Many others in the community contributed and helped raise funds,
including by helping out at the monthly pancake breakfasts that became a
neighborhood institution.
Although they helped clients avoid more costly medical care and even
institutionalization, NNN's services were never covered by insurance or
Medicare. Funding was a constant challenge. After Andrea retired in 1993, NNN
affiliated with OHSU, moved, and eventually ceased operation in the face of
budget challenges. Some of its work has continued, however, as former NNN
staff provide foot care both independently and at a church in downtown Portland
that hosts a foot care clinic each week.
After her retirement, Andrea returned to help out at the Hadassah's Nearly New
Shop until it closed in the early 2000s. She also volunteered at the Sellwood
Library. Her pioneering contributions to Portland have been recognized by the
Jefferson Award for public service in 1985 and the Oregon Nursing Association
Honorary Nursing Practice Award in 1988. She also received the Song of Miriam
Award from Portland Chapter of Hadassah.
Since she arrived in Portland as a young woman, Andrea has quietly and with
compassion led the way in nursing and in volunteer activities. She is truly a
heroine!
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