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NAILS The Nursing Excellence Awards is a peer-nominated award, created in honor of 2020 being the “Year of the Nurse,” and in recognition of the critical role nurses have played in treating patients throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, was open to qualifying RNs and LPNs working in a direct patient care position who consistently demonstrate characteristics synonymous with nursing excellence. Moses Taylor Hospital selected Maureen Leggiero, RN. She was chosen for being a calm, compassionate caregiver and team player during the pandemic. Her calmness and confidence has helped to allay patient fears and anxiety. Leggiero joined Moses Taylor Hospital in July 2000 and in that time has partnered with CHEMS to bring chest pain education to the community. Maureen also helped the emergency room’s success in meeting core measure requirements and in securing the hospital’s chest pain and stroke re-accreditations.

Namedropper, December 13, 2020

1 of 2 Thirteen women who completed the University of Scranton Women’s Entrepreneurship Center and Small Business Development Center StartUP fall program include, from top left: Donna Simpson, consultant manager, SBDC; Katelyn McManamon, special projects coordinator, SBDC; Chloe Burns and Hollyann Serp, WEC student interns; Peggy Doolittle, WEC administrative assistant; Emilee Barrett, Jordyn Lieber, Mollie Boyd and Nicole Freeman, WEC student interns; Michele Havrilchak, Tanya Crawford, Lonni Schmeckenbecher, Jasmine Benvenutti, Lori DeVoe, Laura Gilbody, Abigail Guziewicz, WEC student interns; Nohemi Garcia Tafoya, Crystal Perez, Yajaira Suarez-Babcock, Evelyn Barra and Jennifer Coleman.

League of Women Voters of Lackawanna County announces virtual campaign school

League of Women Voters of Lackawanna County announces virtual campaign school
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Here s one tip for making your New Year s resolution more likely to stick

KXLY December 13, 2020 6:30 PM By Ryan Prior, CNN Posted: Updated: Shutterstock Your resolution is more likely to work if you set a goal to run toward something positive, rather than avoid something negative, a new study said. Want to replace your television habit with exercise? “I want to start running” could work better than “I want to quit watching TV so much.” How we phrase our New Year’s resolution could give us a slight edge as to whether or not we’ll stick to the new habit, according to a study published Wednesday in the open-access journal PLOS One. Frame your resolution in the positive, as something you’re committing to doing may work better than framing your goal around quitting a bad habit or avoiding a particular greasy food.

Black Louisiana troopers were called monkey, Django by White colleagues, review finds

A Black trooper with the Louisiana State Police was on a break when his cellphone buzzed with an unusual voice message. It was from a White colleague, unaware his Apple Watch had recorded him, blurting out the Black trooper’s name followed by a searing racial slur. “F - n , what did you expect?” That unguarded moment, sent in a pocket-dial of sorts, touched off an internal investigation at Louisiana’s premier law-enforcement agency that remained under wraps for three years before a local television station reported last month that the White trooper had not even been reprimanded for the racist recording.

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