Asbury Park Press

Dr. Janice A. Egeland

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Dr. Janice A. Egeland, of Hershey, PA and Lakeland, FL passed away in Jackson, NJ on July 4th, 2023. She recently celebrated her 89th birthday. Born June 16th, 1934, she was the second daughter of Peter A. and Nina L. Egeland of Colts Neck, NJ, (both deceased.) Janice is survived by her sister, Nina E. Walzer, one niece, N. Diane Benner and her spouse, Frank of Perkasie, PA; four nephews: John (David) Walzer and his spouse, Karen of Freehold, NJ, Paul G. Walzer and his spouse, Lynn of Howell, NJ, Thomas M. Walzer and his spouse Kathryn of Edmonds, WA, Peter M. Walzer and his spouse, Jean of Jackson, NJ. Janice also enjoyed contact and visits with numerous great-nephews, colleagues, and many beloved friends.

Janice was a 1952 salutatori­an graduate of Red Bank H.S. She graduated with Phi Beta Kappa honors from the U. of Penn in 1956 with a B.S. in microbiolo­gy and achieved her Master’s degree in sociology in 1959. She taught sociology at the College of Liberal Arts and the Wharton School of the U. of Penn from ‘57 to ‘58, and general and rural sociology at Franklin and Marshall College. As a Fellow in Medical Genetics affiliated with Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, she cooperated with the Moore Clinic in a series of culture and genetic studies of Amish communitie­s becoming immersed in the Amish community. Upon finding that the book of Amish and Mennonite pioneer family lineages was in need of updating, she undertook the project with the cooperatio­n of the Amish. The Moore Clinic published the updated volume, “Descendant­s of Christian Fisher and Other Amish-Mennonite Pioneer Families,” Jan. 1st, 1972.

In 1967, Janice received her Doctorate in Medical Sociology at Yale University. Her dissertati­on was based on a five-year ethnograph­ic study of the patterns of healthcare and health behavior among Old Order Amish, laying the groundwork for her future NIH-affiliated Amish Studies, I & II. These were ground-breaking in terms of her team’s discovery of the genetics of mental illness. Studying family lineages and occurrence­s of mental illness in a “protected” community like the Amish, with far fewer “outside” influences, coupled with blood studies of individual­s, enabled prediction­s for future mental illness that could be diagnosed, monitored and treated in a timely manner.

June 15, 1967, Janice was appointed Assistant Professor of Behavioral Science, Penn State U., College of Medicine at the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, PA, making her the first and only woman on the original staff of founding doctors at the newly opened medical center.

Dr. Egeland was published in top Medical journals, authored and collaborat­ed in 55 publicatio­ns. She was affiliated with Yale U., the U. of Miami and the Miami Miller School of Medicine, Columbia U., U. of Massachuse­tts Medical School, Harvard U., the U. of Louisville, and Eli Lilly. Her awards for her research are numerous. In 1987 she was the first woman to receive Europe’s “top prize” in Psychiatry from the Anna-Monika Foundation. Also in 1987 she received the Abraham Lincoln Award by the National Depressive and Manic Depressive Associatio­n, in 1988 the Rema Lapouse Mental Health Epidemiolo­gy Award of the American Public Health Associatio­n, and also the Victor M. Cannon Award for Research on Manic Depressive Illness presented by the American Mental Health Fund. In 1990 she was awarded the Schoenfeld and the Albert Einstein Awards for recognitio­n in the field of psychiatri­c research.

She was a member of the Pennsylvan­ia German Society, Lancaster Community Historians, American Anthropolo­gical Assoc., Society for Applied Anthropolo­gy, American Anthropolo­gy, American Sociologic­al Assoc., and Eastern Sociologic­al Society.

Besides her intensely involved career, she maintained membership­s related to her many outside interests. She was a member of the National Audubon Society and traveled to many birding locations, compiling a robust “lifer list.” She was an avid flyfisher and member of the Delaware Valley Women’s Fly Fishing Associatio­n. While living in Florida, she enjoyed collecting seashells, including specimens of rare tree snails. More recently she published a book of her own poetry.

Her family-time was most enjoyed in the company of family and friends at her mother’s dining room table overlookin­g the reservoir in Colts Neck, catching up with family, and entertaini­ng guests at her condo in Lakeland FL. where she enjoyed a rainbow every day in the pond fountain by her porch.

Janice considered herself greatly blessed by many friends and colleagues through her career. Her family takes comfort knowing how fervently and successful­ly she lived to serve others, expanding knowledge in the fields of Psychiatry and Genetics. Despite the family’s concern, she continued working until her health declined. She was indeed, a force to be reckoned with... However, with God’s coaxing, she is finally retired.

There will be a visitation on Wednesday, July 12, 2023 from 10 AM to 1 PM with a prayer service at 1 PM at the John E. Day Funeral Home 85 Riverside Ave. Red Bank, N.J. Interment to immediatel­y follow at the Fair View Cemetery in Middletown, N.J.

Please visit Janice’s memorial website at www.johnedayfu­neralhome.com In lieu of flowers, please donate in her name to to https://give.michaeljfo­x. org or https://www.parkinson.org/

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