Mrs. Daisy Swinton at her pinning ceremony (Source: Huntsville Hospital) By Anna Mahan | April 14, 2021 at 4:53 PM CDT - Updated April 14 at 4:54 PM
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - A new scholarship is available for nursing students in north Alabama, and its in honor of one trailblazing Huntsville nurse.
Daisy P. Swinton served Huntsville Hospital patients for 40 years, working her way from housekeeping to the hospital’s first ever African American ICU Nurse Manager. A new scholarship was just launched in her memory to encourage and empower future nursing students to follow in Daisy’s footsteps. Mrs. Daisy Swinton (Source: Huntsville Hospital)
The scholarship was founded by Huntsville Hospital alongside her family. It’s funded by a community of generous donors who want to see Swinton’s legacy continue.
4 U.S. Army Health Clinic Baumholder serves a military community of just over 8,000 personnel, set in the remote, forested hills of Baumholder, Germany.
In the small community, readiness is essential, both physically and mentally. With over 24 years of service in uniform, Diana Bluthardt now serves as the sole psychiatric nurse practitioner for the community and is committed to enhancing the latter.
Bluthardt, who works at U.S. Army Health Clinic Baumholder’s Behavioral Health Clinic and also serves as a medical provider for the Baumholder Military Community’s Substance Use Disorder Clinical Care program, chose to continue serving in the Army Reserves following more than a decade of active-duty commitment. Although many Soldiers who later earn college degrees choose to crossover to commissioned positions, after earning her nursing degree Bluthardt chose to stay enlisted, serving as a combat medic and later Licensed Practical Nurse before retiring.
COVID vaccinations for Black, Hispanic populations lag in Dutchess poughkeepsiejournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from poughkeepsiejournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
There are a number of proposed courses of action for the âSilver Tsunami,â the expected surge from an aging U.S. population that will likely strain the U.S. health care system in a way similar to the COVID-19 pandemic but over a longer period of time.
The âWisconsin 2020 Health Care Workforce Reportâ from the Wisconsin Hospitals Association says that solutions include creating a healthier population by curbing obesity to lower the need for hospital visits. There are also racial disparities that have left communities of color, especially in Wisconsin, with longstanding barriers to quality health care as well as more challenges for young people to enter the medical fields.
nurse-riko net ナースが教える仕事術~医療と看護の現場から学んだノウハウ coolsocial.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from coolsocial.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.