- Don B. Ardell
-
Donald B. Ardell has been one of the leading figures in the wellness movement for four decades. The author of numerous books and articles on wellness he has also been a popular speaker on wellness-related topics appearance in every U.S. state except Rhode Island and Maine, all Canadian provinces and throughout Australia.
He earned his bachelors degree in sociology in 1963 from George Washington University, where he also met Janice Larkins, his first wife. Don attended GWU on a full basketball scholarship after playing for three years on U.S. Air Force teams, where he was recruited by a former GWU player who became the Assistant Coach at GWU during Don's time three. Don played three years at GWU, leading the school to winning the Southern Conference Championship in 1962 and a berth in the NCAA tournament, where his team lost to Princeton at Madison Square Garden in New York City. He earned a Master of City and Regional Planning at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1965 and subsequently attended Stanford University Business School's Senior Executive Program in 1973. He was awarded his doctorate in health and public policy in 1977 by Union Institute and University.
In 1974 he wrote a series of articles in the American Journal of Health Planning that described how health planning could be reoriented from regulating hospital expansions to promoting healthy lifestyles. He reports that before the essential demise of health planning in the late 70's, one-third of the more than two-hundred areawide health planning agencies had adopted a goal of promoting wellness
In 1977 he published High Level Wellness: An Alternative to Doctors, Drugs, and Disease, expanding the concept of High Level Wellness first employed by Halbert L. Dunn. Ardell's book was a best-seller, published initially by Rodale Press and then in numerous reprint editions by Bantam Books and Ten-Speed Press. He later wrote more than a dozen additional wellness books, including 14 Days to a Wellness Lifestyle, REAL Wellness and Aging Beyond Belief. He was one of ten persons given the Healthy America Fitness Leaders Award in 1991 by the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, the Allstate Insurance Company and the U.S. Jaycees. In 2010, Don was honored in Düsseldorf by the German Wellness Association with a Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2010, he won second place in the annual Ingersoll Oratory Contest sponsored by the Washington Area Humanist Association at DuPont Circle in Washington, DC. Don recited Robert Green Ingersoll's Lotus Club speech, New York, March 22, 1890.
He was an Adjunct Professor at the University of Central Florida where he guided that university's Campus Wellness Center from 1984 until 1996. He started published the quarterly Ardell Wellness Report in 1984 (74 editions were produced) and for over a decade has produced a weekly electronic newsletter by the same name. As of mid-2011, nearly 700 of these AWRs have been distributed worldwide.
He has also earned distinction as an athlete. He is considered one of the fastest runners in the world in his age class. He for been a perennial All-American triathlete and duathlete, winning many national titles in both sports. He also has won four World Triathlon Championships in his divisions, including events in Tasmania (1994), Montreal (1999), the Gold Coast of Australia (2009) and Budapest (2010).
Books
- High Level Wellness: An Alternative to Doctors, Drugs, and Disease
- An Author's Guide to Journals in the Health Field
- Planning for Wellness: A Guidebook
- The History and Future of Wellness
- 14 Days to a Wellness Lifestyle
- Wellness: The Body, Mind and Spirit
- Die Healthy: Sixteen Steps to Wellness (with Grant Donovan)
- Live More of Your Life the Wellness Way
- REAL Wellness: What's New in Wellness Today
- Aging Beyond Belief
References
- Biography of Donald B. Ardell, Ph.D. [1]
- Ardell, D. B. (1976). High Level Wellness: An Alternative to Doctors, Drugs and Disease. Emmaus, PA: Rodale.
- Ardell, D. B. (2000). What is wellness? [2]
- Ardell, D. B. (Sept. 16, 2000). The Road to Wellness. Address to the Japan Wellness Society. [3]
- Ardell, D. B. (Dec. 29, 2000). A (very) brief history of the wellness concept. Wellness in the Headlines (Don's Report to the World). [4]
- Ardell, D. B. (July 14, 2004). The Legacy of Wellness. Keynote address at the 29th annual National Wellness Conference, Stevens Point, Wisconsin. [5]
- Dunn, H.L. (1961). High-Level Wellness. Arlington, VA: Beatty Press.
Categories:- Health educators
- Living people
- People in alternative medicine
- Stanford Graduate School of Business alumni
- George Washington University alumni
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.