News & Press https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/ Fri, 26 Apr 2024 19:01:25 GMT Mon, 11 Sep 2023 18:27:00 GMT Copyright © 2023 Ohio League for Nursing Help Wanted: Nurse Mentors https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/651206/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/651206/ Help Wanted: Nurse Mentors for a More Diverse Nurse Workforce

The AARP Center for Health Equity through NursingSM (A-CHEN) is seeking nurses, working or retired, to mentor nursing students from underrepresented communities. A mentor is defined as a wise and trusted counselor or teacher, a tutor, advisor, or coach. Mentors can also serve as role models. Nurse mentors are volunteers who commit to serve as a positive, professional role model for nursing students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, and American Indian/Alaska Native schools.

A-CHEN serves as a vehicle for change and a national resource, hosting specific programs and activities that align with AARP’s health equity priorities, including the Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action, an initiative of AARP Foundation, AARP, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

For the past several years, the Campaign for Action has worked with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Resources and Services Administration, Indian Health Services, and other federal offices to prioritize diversifying the nursing workforce and support schools of nursing with creating or updating their mentor programs. Most recently, the Campaign hosted a mentor-training workshop with Hispanic and American Indian/Alaska Native-serving Institutions. It also held a nursing track at the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities’ (HBCU) 2019 National HBCU Week Conference.

“The work the Campaign is doing could not be more urgent,” said Deborah C. Stamps, EdD, MBA, MS, RN, GNP, NE-BC, founder and chief executive officer of Deborah Stamps Consulting, LLC. “About half of all Black and Latino students entering four-year colleges fail to complete their degrees. When students fail out of nursing programs, they suffer, our health care system suffers, and stubborn health disparities persist. Mentoring is a proven retention and success strategy. Mentoring is going to get us to a more diverse and representative nursing workforce,” said Stamps, who has more than 30 years of progressive health care leadership and is a recognized authority on workforce development, diversity, equity, inclusion, justice, nursing education, and leadership.

A-CHEN is now leveraging this mentoring program through a partnership with the AARP Office of Volunteer Engagement, which is recruiting mentors to work with nursing students through a portal on AARP’s website. Interested active or retired nurses will be prompted to sign up and then complete a questionnaire that takes about fifteen minutes. It asks about an applicant’s education and professional experience in nursing, their areas of specialty, their hopes for serving as a mentor and concludes with some demographic information.

The AARP mentoring team will follow up with a few more questions, match eligible volunteers with a participating nursing school in their area, then invite the mentors for some trainings in preparation for their service. There are also quarterly learning collaborations and check-ins for every participating mentor.

Mentoring has tangible benefits for the mentor. In addition to the pride in being a part of someone else’s growth and development in the nursing profession, mentors have the opportunity to grow their own skills such as listening, accepting feedback, problem-solving, and leadership. Mentors learn new things about their own fields, about themselves, and about – and from – their mentees.

People who are interested in applying can go to the AARP Volunteer Portal for the Nurse Mentoring Program.

For background on the Campaign’s mentoring program, visit this landing page: https://campaignforaction.org/mentor-training/.

The AARP Center for Health Equity through Nursing serves as a vehicle for change and national resource for advancing health equity.  CCNA is an initiative of AARP Foundation, AARP and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and it runs the Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action, an initiative of the same organizations building a healthier America through nursing. Since its founding in 2007, CCNA has created national and state multi-sector networks to stimulate collaboration, innovation and spur action for better health and well-being through nursing.

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News Mon, 11 Sep 2023 19:27:00 GMT
2022 NLN Centers of Excellence in Nursing Education https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/612664/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/612664/ 2022 NLN Centers of Excellence in Nursing Education

NLN Proudly Announces 2022 Centers of Excellence in Nursing Education

Honorees Recognized for Sustained Excellence in Faculty Development, Nursing Education Research, Student Learning & Professional Development, and Academic Progression in Nursing

Washington, DC — Sixteen nursing education programs across the academic spectrum of higher education in nursing as well as leading teaching hospitals and clinical sites have been named 2022 NLN Centers of Excellence by the National League for Nursing. Formal recognition will take place during the 2022 NLN Education Summit at the Honors Convocation on Friday, September 30.

As in years past, there have been repeat awardees, including Duke University, Emory University, University of Alabama, and University of Kansas. Duke University stands out for being the only institution to have all four designations.

2022 NLN Centers of Excellence

Creating Environments that Promote the Pedagogical Expertise of Faculty

Boston College
Duke University School of Nursing
Fairfield University
Indiana University
Pennsylvania State University
University of Alabama in Huntsville
University of South Carolina

Creating Environments that Advance the Science of Nursing Education

Kent State University
University of Alabama
Villanova University

Creating Environments that EnhanceStudent Learning and Professional Development

Emory University
South Dakota State University
University of Delaware
University of Kansas
University of New Mexico

Creating Workplace Environments that Promote the Academic Progression of Nurses

Norton Healthcare

Extending congratulations to the exceptional institutions named 2022 NLN Centers of Excellence, NLN Chair Kathleen Poindexter, PhD, RN, CNE, ANEF, interim associate dean of academic affairs at Michigan State University in Lansing said, “It is no secret that it takes a village of scholars and visionary leaders to collaborate to co-create and sustain educational excellence. Those individuals—faculty, deans, and administrators—deserve our deepest gratitude. NLN Centers of Excellence faculty and leadership have proven ready to share their expertise, best practices, and insights with the entire nursing education community to enable more programs to qualify for the prestigious COE designation.” 

NLN President and CEO Beverly Malone, PhD, RN, FANN, said, “NLN Centers of Excellence help raise the bar for all nursing programs by role modeling visionary leadership and environments of inclusive excellence that nurture the next generation of a strong and diverse nursing workforce to advance the health of the nation and the global community.”

Since 2004, the National League for Nursing has invited nursing schools and programs to apply to achieve COE designation, based on their ability to demonstrate in concrete, measurable terms their sustained excellence in faculty development, nursing education research, student learning and professional development, and academic progression in nursing. Historically, a number of programs have achieved recognition in multiple categories or once designated, have maintained their COE status through multiple award cycles.

For more information about the program and application requirements, visit NLN.org. For more information about the 2022 NLN Education Summit, visit Summit.NLN.org.

 
 
 
 

About the National League for Nursing

Dedicated to excellence in nursing, the National League for Nursing is the premier organization for nurse faculty and leaders in nursing education. The NLN offers professional development, networking opportunities, testing services, nursing research grants, and public policy initiatives to its nearly 45,000 individual and 1,100 institutional members, comprising nursing education programs across the spectrum of higher education and health care organizations. Learn more at NLN.org.

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News Thu, 28 Jul 2022 23:15:00 GMT
Nation’s Leading Nursing Organizations Issue Urgent Appeal for Support for Ukraine’s Health Care Wor https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/599140/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/599140/
Nation’s Leading Nursing Organizations Issue Urgent Appeal for Support for Ukraine’s Health Care Workers

Hospitals & Health Care Workers Under Threat by Russia’s Assault on Civilian Targets Add to Growing Humanitarian Crisis
As Russia’s brutal, unprovoked military assault against Ukraine continues, the five-member Tri-Council for Nursing — American Association of Colleges of Nursing, American Nurses Association, American Organization for Nursing Leadership, National Council of State Boards of Nursing, and National League for Nursing — joins the International Council of Nurses, the International Rescue Committee and other national and international nursing, medical and emergency response organizations worldwide in solidarity with the health care communities in Ukraine and across the eastern European region.
 
Not surprisingly, Ukraine’s health care workers are on the front lines of the deepening crisis. Reports of subterranean, makeshift wards in Kyiv and elsewhere reflect the increasingly chaotic circumstances of people desperate for emergency medical attention and treatment of chronic conditions. With military and civilian fatalities and injuries mounting amidst street fighting in Ukraine’s cities and the wanton destruction of civilian enclaves like apartment complexes, schools and hospitals, the need for critical care and emergency response teams is certain to increase in the coming days.
 
As during the COVID-19 pandemic, health care professionals are once again called upon to make personal sacrifices, at grave risk to themselves and their families. Our Ukrainian colleagues remain steadfast in this latest test of fortitude, fulfilling their sworn oath as healers. But now, Ukrainian nurses, physicians, and other health care workers, as well as the facilities and resources required to provide safe, effective care are stretched to the breaking point.
 
We want them to know they are not isolated and alone, that humanity counts on their vital service in this dark time. We pledge to do whatever is within our collective power — including urging monetary and other material donations to assist the Ukrainian nursing workforce in providing urgently needed health care. The International Council of Nurses is collecting funds through its Humanitarian Fund to support nurses in the Ukraine and humanitarian efforts in the country.
 
We condemn in the strongest terms the violation of the Geneva Convention and international law that enshrines the protection of medical and health care workers. Safeguarding health care staff and facilities everywhere to maintain unfettered access to health care and the delivery of humanitarian assistance must remain a priority, over and above political interests and armed conflict anywhere.
 
The invasion of Ukraine has already taken the lives of so many of its citizens and displaced millions of others. We join the global community in working toward a speedy resolution to this deadly conflict, one that will facilitate the return of Ukrainian refugees to their homeland and restore Ukraine’s hope in a peaceful, prosperous, independent future among the family of nations.
 
To help provide food, medical care, and emergency assistance on the ground in Poland, where the majority of Ukrainian refugees have fled to date, donate to the International Committee of the Red Cross or the International Rescue Committee.
 
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About the American Association of Colleges of Nursing
The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) is the voice for academic nursing representing more than 850 member schools of nursing at public and private institutions nationwide. AACN works to establish quality standards for nursing education; assists schools in implementing those standards; influences the nursing profession to improve health care; and promotes public support for professional nursing education, research, and practice. Learn more at www.aacnnursing.org.
 
About the American Nurses Association
The American Nurses Association (ANA) is the premier organization representing the interests of the nation's 4.3 million registered nurses. ANA advances the profession by fostering high standards of nursing practice, promoting a safe and ethical work environment, bolstering the health and wellness of nurses, and advocating on health care issues that affect nurses and the public. ANA is at the forefront of improving the quality of health care for all. For more information, visit www.nursingworld.org.
 
About the American Organization for Nursing Leadership
As the national professional organization of more than 11,000 nurse leaders, the American Organization for Nursing Leadership (AONL) is the voice of nursing leadership. Our membership encompasses nurse leaders working in hospitals, health systems, academia and other care settings across the care continuum. Since 1967, the organization has led the field of nursing leadership through professional development, advocacy and research that advances nursing leadership practice and patient care. AONL is an affiliate of the American Hospital Association. For more information, visit AONL.org.
 
About the National Council of State Boards of Nursing
Empowering and supporting nursing regulators across the world in their mandate to protect the public, NCSBN is an independent, not-for-profit organization. As a global leader in regulatory excellence, NCSBN champions regulatory solutions to borderless health care delivery, agile regulatory systems and nurses practicing to the full scope of their education, experience and expertise. A world leader in test development and administration, NCSBN’s NCLEX® Exams are internationally recognized as the preeminent nursing examinations. NCSBN’s membership is comprised of the nursing regulatory bodies (NRBs) in the 50 states, the District of Columbia and four U.S. territories. There are three exam user members and 27 associate members that are either NRBs or empowered regulatory authorities from other countries or territories.  Learn more at ncsbn.org
 
About the National League for Nursing
Dedicated to excellence in nursing, the National League for Nursing is the premier organization for nurse faculty and leaders in nursing education. The NLN offers professional development, networking opportunities, testing services, nursing research grants, and public policy initiatives to its nearly 45,000 individual and 1,100 institutional members, comprising nursing education programs across the spectrum of higher education and health care organizations. Learn more at NLN.org.

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News Tue, 15 Mar 2022 23:18:00 GMT
NLN Applauds Federal Regulators for Removing Barriers to Nursing Practice During COVID-19 Pandemic https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/498685/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/498685/ National League for Nursing Applauds Federal Regulators for Removing Barriers to Nursing Practice During COVID-19 Pandemic]]> News Tue, 31 Mar 2020 21:16:52 GMT Nursing Leaders Call for Flexibility in the Path to Graduationh t https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497905/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497905/ Nursing Leaders Call for Flexibility in the Path to Graduation
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News Fri, 27 Mar 2020 21:25:56 GMT
FAQ - COVID-19 Licensure https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497870/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497870/ AQ - COVID-19 - Licensure
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News Fri, 27 Mar 2020 20:20:15 GMT
3/27/2020 - Communication to Program Administrators https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497869/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497869/ 3/27/2020 Communication Program Administrators
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News Fri, 27 Mar 2020 20:17:30 GMT
Important COVID-19 Info from Ohio Board of Nursing https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497865/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497865/ Coronavirus Omnibus Legislation (HB197)RN and LPN Initial Licensing March 27,2020
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News Fri, 27 Mar 2020 20:09:31 GMT
Amended Substitute House Bill 197 - Senate Floor Summary https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497805/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/497805/ News Fri, 27 Mar 2020 18:05:57 GMT AACN Applauds Bipartisan Commitment to Support Investments in Nursing Education and Practice https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/435478/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/435478/ AACN Applauds Bipartisan Commitment to Support Investments in Nursing Education and Practice]]> News Thu, 24 Jan 2019 19:40:26 GMT NLN Statement on Title VIII Reauthorization Bill https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/435477/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/435477/ NLN Statement on Title VIII Reauthorization Bill ]]> News Thu, 24 Jan 2019 19:37:56 GMT Legislative Report 1-25-2018 https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/385027/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/385027/ News Thu, 1 Feb 2018 22:30:32 GMT Public Policy Update 2017 https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/370867/ https://www.ohioleaguefornursing.org/news/370867/ News Thu, 19 Oct 2017 20:26:26 GMT