AONL
Content by and about the American Organization for Nursing Leadership (AONL).
The American Organization for Nursing Leadership on April 12 will present its 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award to Maureen Swick, senior vice president and enterprise nurse executive for Atrium Health in Charlotte, N.C.
The American Organization for Nursing Leadership announced its 2022 Class of Fellows.
In this podcast presented by the AHA Living Learning Network and American Organization for Nursing Leadership, Advocate Aurora Health Chief Nursing Officer Mary Beth Kingston, a member of the AHA Board of Trustees, and nurse leader Patricia Quinn, director of maternal child health at Northwell鈥
The AHA鈥檚 American Organization for Nursing Leadership affiliate has elected as its 2022 president-elect Deborah Zimmermann.
The AHA鈥檚 American Organization for Nursing Leadership released the findings of the third survey of nurse leaders in its COVID Insight Study.
Robyn Begley, AHA鈥檚 chief nursing officer, senior vice president for workforce and CEO of the American Organization for Nursing Leadership, will be a featured speaker during the International Hospital Federation鈥檚 World Hospital Congress.
Patient-to-nurse staffing ratios are a static and ineffective tool that cannot guarantee a safe heath care environment, writes Mary Ann Fuchs, president of AHA鈥檚 American Organization for Nursing Leadership affiliate, responding to a recent op-ed in the New York Times.
Robyn Begley, AHA chief nursing officer and senior vice president for workforce and CEO of AHA鈥檚 American Organization for Nursing Leadership, participated in a U.S. News and World Report panel discussion on 鈥淒eveloping the Healthcare Workforce of Tomorrow.鈥
Any threat to the stability of the health care workforce is a threat to the nation鈥檚 infrastructure, writes Robyn Begley, AHA chief nursing officer and CEO of its American Organization for Nursing Leadership, in an op-ed published today by Healthcare Dive.
The National Academy of Medicine released a report on priorities for the nursing profession over the next decade to meet the needs of the U.S. population and achieve health equity, which range from strengthening nursing education and promoting diversity and equity in nursing education and the鈥