Gold Nuggets
2023 Gold Nugget
Alfredo Arellano, College of Nursing, BSN, 1986: MSN, 1990
Alfredo H. Arellano is a community mental health advocate who has made significant contributions to improving mental health services in the El Paso Region. Mr. Arellano is a psychiatric mental health clinical nurse specialist in private practice, treating adults, military personnel and dependents, Veterans and the elderly with the most up-to-date treatments in psychiatry.
Mr. Arellano has served as a clinical instructor and mentor for undergraduate UTEP students and is currently a preceptor for graduate students. He is also a longtime supporter of UTEP Athletics and a UTEP football and basketball season ticket-holder.
2022 Gold Nugget
Dr. Omobola Oyeleye, College of Nursing, MSN Nursing System Managment, 2011
Omobola Oyeleye, Ed.D., is an assistant professor in the undergraduate department at the Cizik School of Nursing at The Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Oyeleye holds a law degree and an education doctorate. She often combines nursing and law in her classes, her presentations throughout the world, and in her publications. Her professional career includes K-12 education (where she earned Teacher of the Year awards), mediation, disability rights law and medical surgical nursing.
2020-2021 Gold Nugget
Catherine (Allie) A. Lozano, College of Nursing, BSN, 2002
Allie Trimble-Lozano serves as regional chief executive officer of The Hospitals of Providence microhospitals with Emerus Holdings Inc. She has successfully led the development and operation of three neighborhood hospitals in Horizon City and in Northeast and far East El Paso, and eight health care facilities in San Antonio.
Since 2002, Trimble-Lozano, an El Paso native, has worked her way up from critical care nurse to one of the most successful health care administrators in the Paso del Norte region.
Among her notable accomplishments, Trimble-Lozano successfully established 12 urgent care centers from El Paso to the Interstate 35 corridor from San Antonio and Austin.
“I have been blessed with the opportunity to build an incredibly strong, talented and cohesive team of caregivers, subject matter experts, and leaders for what I have coined the ‘San Paso Region,’” said Trimble-Lozano, who holds a Master of Business Administration degree from the Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of Phoenix. “Together we have been honored to bring health care to areas that were previously incredibly underserved within the El Paso community as well as the San Antonio community.”
2019 Gold Nugget
Carolyn Moody Drake, College of Nursing, BSN, 1975
For decades, Carolyn Moody Drake has served her community as an RN, then as a volunteer. Among a wide range of community service, Moody Drake has focused much of her energy on the PARTNERS organization, which supports The Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Cizik School of Nursing by raising funds for nursing scholarships and faculty research grants. She was the chair of PARTNERS in 2012-13 and continues to be involved as a lifetime member. A popular presenter on health care topics, Moody Drake ebulliently shares her knowledge and passion about nursing with others. She also drives, cooks and opens her home for those in need - most recently in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey flooding in 2017 in southeast Texas. A lifetime member of the UTEP Alumni Association, Moody Drake said, "UTEP taught me to value a high-quality education in a multicultural environment, and it solidified an ideology based on caring and kindness."
2018 Gold Nuggets
Annie L. Garcia, MSN in Nursing Systems Management, 2013
A year after completing her graduate degree in 2013, Annie Garcia was hired as the chief nursing officer at Methodist Texsan Hospital in San Antonio, where she was instrumental in the hospital’s efforts to improve nursing engagement, patient experience and quality outcomes. In 2017, she was named chief nursing officer at Del Sol Medical Center in El Paso.
Christina I. Paz, DNP. 2013
Dr. Christina Ilene Paz, is the chief operating officer at Centro San Vicente Family Health Center in El Paso. As a member of the Texas Association of Community Health Centers, she has met with members of Congress to advocate on behalf of community health centers and the vulnerable populations they serve.
2017 Gold Nugget
Erik Cazares, B.S. in Nursing, 2000
Erik Cazares is the chief nursing officer at The Hospitals of Providence Sierra Campus in El Paso. He mentors young hospital leaders and nurses. He is recognized as someone who is articulate, inspirational and a role model. He is a national voice for his profession in nursing organizations.
2016 Gold Nugget
Karen Lyon, Ph.D. B.S. in Nursing, 1974; M.S. in Nursing, 1978
Karen Lyon, Ph.D., was one of El Paso’s first baccalaureate prepared nurses to graduate from The Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of Texas System College of Nursing in 1974 and one of the first students in the new Master of Science in Nursing program at the UTEP College of Nursing. She joined UTEP as a faculty member in 1979. In 2004, she was named assistant dean of graduate nursing. During her tenure with the Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é, Lyon developed the graduate degree in nursing systems management and UTEP’s Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing Fast Track Program. She currently serves as executive director of the Louisiana State Board of Nursing.
2015 Gold Nuggets
Jean Foret Giddens, Ph.D., M.S. in Nursing, 1986
Earning a Master of Science in Nursing from UTEP marked the beginning of Jean Foret Giddens’ distinguished career in nursing academia. A nationally recognized expert in nursing education, curricula and evaluation, Giddens was named dean of the Virginia Commonwealth Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é School of Nursing in 2013. She is the author of numerous nursing textbooks and previously served as the dean of the College of Nursing at the Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of New Mexico.
Sylvia Martinez, B.S. in Nursing, 1983
As a nurse in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at Providence Memorial Hospital for 13 years, Sylvia Martinez cared for critically ill newborns while offering their parents much-needed comfort and support. The first-generation college graduate parlayed that experience into opening Altomar, a home health care agency, in 2000. The company, which started with eight employees, has grown to 65 contracted employees and serves more than 450 clients in El Paso County and southern New Mexico.
2013 Gold Nuggets
Helen M. Castillo, Ph.D. B.S. in Nursing, 1974
Among the first to graduate from the RN to B.S.N. (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) program in 1974, Dr. Castillo combined her two passions – helping others and teaching. In 1976, she began teaching leadership and management courses at what is today the UTEP College of Nursing. Dr. Castillo continued on as a faculty member at the school, eventually serving as chair of the UTEP nursing program when it was part of the College of Nursing and Allied Health. She retired in 2009 as dean of the College of Health and Human Development at California State Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é at Northridge.
Stan Harmon, B.S. in Nursing, 1993
With a bachelor’s degree in nursing from UTEP and MSN from Texas Tech Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é in Lubbock, Mr. Harmon is now a family nurse practitioner at William Beaumont Army Medical Center at Fort Bliss. He serves on the Advanced Practice Advisory Committee to the Texas Board of Nursing and two committees for the Texas Nurse’s Association representing Advanced Practice.
2012 Gold Nugget
Enrique Mata, B.S. in Nursing, 1997
As a senior program officer with the Paso Del Norte Health Foundation, Mr. Mata promotes regional health and disease prevention on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border. His initiatives have resulted in major enhancements to the region’s health and wellness infrastructure and in appreciably improved health outcomes among residents. Achievements include the creation of three major centers in Chihuahua, Mexico, to provide meals, transportation, physical activity and mental health support to several thousand older adults, and the development of a national model for coordinated school health that, in El Paso, resulted in a 13 percent decrease in prevalence of obesity among fourth graders.
2011 Gold Nuggets
Colleen Jernigan, M.S. in Nursing Administration, 1999
Dr. Jernigan entered the UTEP master’s program in nursing at the age of 40 to fulfill a job requirement for a position that needed an advanced nursing degree. Earning her master’s degree would open wide the door to a position at Houston’s Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, acclaimed by many as the No. 1 cancer hospital in the world. She accepted the job of nurse manager and within four years was promoted to clinical administrative director for the hospital’s Sarcoma Center. After receiving her doctorate in nursing, Dr. Jernigan also serves as an adjunct faculty in Texas Women’s Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é and UTEP.
Linda Lawson, B.S. in Nursing, 1987
After graduating from UTEP in 1987, she worked as a nurse at Lubbock General Hospital, and then returning to El Paso to work as a nurse in the ICU/Post- Anesthesia Care Unit at Providence Memorial Hospital. She also worked in hospital from Houston Boson and returned to El Paso be the Chief Nursing Officer for Sierra Medical Center in 2008. Ms. Lawson also serves as a surveyor for the American Nurses Credentialing Center Magnet Recognition Program, which recognizes excellence in professional nursing practice at hospitals worldwide, Ms. Lawson also has lobbied the Texas Legislature to continue funding nursing schools to address the statewide nursing shortage.
2010 Gold Nuggets
Yvonne Acosta, B.S.in Nursing 1983, M.S.N in Nursing-Maternal
As a lawyer, Yvonne Acosta might seem an unlikely choice for the Gold Nugget Award from UTEP’s College of Nursing. After graduating from UTEP, she worked at an El Paso hospital in various capacities, including staff nurse and patient educator in newborn and obstetrics nursing. She also served as an associate professor of nursing at UTEP. Ms. Acosta also became an advocate for those in the profession of nursing. Ms. Acosta also received a law degree from ST. Mary’s Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é in San Antonio in 1995 in order to defend and protect doctors and nurses from liability challenges.
Gloria Bombach, B.S. in Nursing, 1977
Ms. Bombach has spent most of her career rural towns. In 1980, she and her husband, a general physician, opened a practice in Beaver, Oklahoma, which has a population of about 1200. As the clinic’s business manager, she found time to conduct free seminars throughout the area on self-breast examinations and Lamaze childbirth methods. After her divorce, she moved to Dalhart, Texas, population of about 7000, where she works for Dalhart Independent School District as the school nurse. Although the town is larger than Beaver, OK, it is still small enough that more than 1,000 school children depend almost solely on her for quality care.