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NP-Led Phone Calls With Chronically Ill Patients Reduce ED Visits

Credit: Getty Images. The following article is a part of conference coverage from the 2021 American Association of Nurse Practitioners National Conference (AANP 2021), held virtually from June 15 to June 20, 2021. The team at the Clinical Advisor will be reporting on the latest news and research conducted by leading NPs. Check back for more from AANP 2021.   For chronically ill, home-based patients, telephone access to nurse practitioners (NPs) is associated with decreased emergency department (ED) visits, according to findings presented at the 2021 American Academy of Nurse Practitioners National Conference (AANP 2021). The availability of federal funding has allowed for the development of academic-clinical partnerships between NP education programs and community-based clinical agencies, noted Denise Coppa, PhD, FNP-C, FAANP, FAAN, and colleagues. These academic-clinical partnerships contribute to value-based health care models — like NP-led home-based primary care

Commencement 2021: Ghanaian nursing student achieves her life s dream at URI after decade-long struggle – URI News

Telma Odoom, URI’s college of Nursing KINGSTON, R.I. May 24, 2021 Telma Odoom regards caring for others as a nurse as her destiny. However, her journey to becoming a nurse was almost a decade-long struggle. “My name is Telma, which to me means ‘to care,’” says Odoom, who graduated Friday from the University of Rhode Island’s College of Nursing. “That’s what I’ve wanted to do my whole life, but it was nowhere near easy. A native of Ghana , Odoom immigrated to the United States with her parents in 2012. Odoom felt constricted by the rigid school system back home. She enrolled in college in Ghana to pursue a bachelor’s degree in economics and statistics before coming to the U.S..

Commencement 2021: Ghanaian nursing student achieves her life s dream at URI after decade-long struggle – URI Today

Telma Odoom, URI’s college of Nursing KINGSTON, R.I. May 24, 2021 Telma Odoom regards caring for others as a nurse as her destiny. However, her journey to becoming a nurse was almost a decade-long struggle. “My name is Telma, which to me means ‘to care,’” says Odoom, who graduated Friday from the University of Rhode Island’s College of Nursing. “That’s what I’ve wanted to do my whole life, but it was nowhere near easy. A native of Ghana , Odoom immigrated to the United States with her parents in 2012. Odoom felt constricted by the rigid school system back home. She enrolled in college in Ghana to pursue a bachelor’s degree in economics and statistics before coming to the U.S..

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