Topic   Charting Nursing's Future

Displaying 49-56 of 71

  1. Hawaii Joins States Using Tax Laws to Support Nursing Education

    Jun 18, 2018

    Hawaii is now the fourth state in the nation to pass a law aimed at helping the United States reduce its chronic shortage of preceptors, with an innovative solution that uses the power of the tax code to try to bolster their numbers. more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Transforming Nursing Education Location: Hawaii

  2. Nursing’s Expertise Gap

    May 22, 2018

    Millennials are entering the nursing profession in large enough numbers to fill most of the jobs vacated by retiring baby boomers, but new nurses lack the expertise of nurses who have been in the workforce for more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Collecting Workforce Data

  3. Riverside’s Volunteer RNs, a Source of Knowledge and Experience

    May 22, 2018

    Retired nurse Diane McCarthy, RN, BSN, (at right) volunteers in the neonatal intensive care unit at OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus. Millennial nurses such as Erin Bergmann, RN, MSN, CNL, benefit more

    Issues: Collecting Workforce Data Increasing Diversity in Nursing

  4. Multistate Licenses Help Military-Spouse and Other Nurses Begin Working Right Away

    May 14, 2018

    When Yumuriel Whitaker’s husband was transferred to Georgia from the Florida naval base where he was stationed, Whitaker applied for a Georgia nursing license in order to work legally in the state. The process, she says, was “tedious, challenging, and confusing.” She had to pay $60. Submit passport photos. Fill out paperwork. And wait. more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Improving Access to Care

  5. Many States, One License: The Enhanced Nurse Licensure Compact Is Now Live

    May 14, 2018

    As the 21st century has progressed, it’s become increasingly apparent that allowing geographical boundaries to limit health care professionals’ reach is not good for consumers or the people providing care. The average American now moves approximately 11 times in a lifetime; the days of settling and staying in one place are all but gone. more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Improving Access to Care Promoting Nursing Leadership

  6. Nurses Remain Largely Invisible in the Media

    May 08, 2018

    A 1998 study of nurses’ voices in the media found that nurses were “largely invisible” in leading print publications. Twenty years later, little has changed. That’s the sobering conclusion of The Woodhull Study Revisited: Nurses’ Representation in Health News more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Promoting Nursing Leadership

  7. Kentucky Clinic Opens Students’ Eyes

    Apr 30, 2018

    Sometimes transformative nursing education can take place in the community, with patients who earn very little, speak limited English, and may not read. Patients at the Kentucky Racing Health Services Center typically hail from Mexico and Guatemala. They come to the U.S. to work as contract employees and exercise, feed, and shampoo the racehorses at Louisville’s Churchill Downs racetrack. more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Transforming Nursing Education

  8. Nurses Support the Health of Horse Racing’s Invisible Workers

    Apr 30, 2018

    The Kentucky Derby calls forth images of giant racehorses, garlands of red roses, and fans wearing elaborate hats and sipping mint juleps. But behind the track’s public face are low-wage workers who labor in the backstretch, near the stables. more

    Issues: Building Healthier Communities Transforming Nursing Education

Displaying 49-56 of 71