The number of nurses holding state legislative office in the U.S. has declined significantly over the past decade, investigators from Columbia Nursing report in a new study.
Columbia University School of Nursing ranked #1 among all U.S. schools of nursing for total research funding received from the NIH in fiscal year 2023.
Study led by Lusine Poghosyan, PhD, is the first to look specifically at primary care NPs, the fastest-growing group of primary care providers in the U.S.
By co-managing primary care patients, nurse practitioners (NPs) and physicians can reduce their individual workloads, and improve patient care access, quality, and healthcare outcomes.
Youths with sickle cell disease who received disease management support from a community health worker reported greater improvements in medication adherence and health-related quality of life domains.
Growing up in a small village in Armenia during times of upheaval and hardship, Poghosyan, the daughter of a pediatric nurse, learned the value of community and the enduring spirit.
On April 5, Columbia Nursing faculty and students were among those who led and participated in activities for CUIMC first Day of Interprofessional Action.
Columbia Nursing is addressing the health care needs of the LGBT community through targeted research that informs practice, by offering specialized care, and by fostering a culture of tolerance.
People living with HIV who used a smartphone app that provided evidence-based self-care strategies demonstrated greater symptom relief and medication adherence.
Nurses can play an important role in reducing the deleterious effects of climate change on respiratory health, especially among vulnerable patient populations, according to a Columbia Nursing paper.
Researchers at Columbia Nursing found that post-menopausal women, an expanding demographic among aging HIV patients, suffer more from fatigue and muscle aches than others living with HIV.
As a rookie nurse in 1968, Elaine Larson, PhD, RN, associate dean for research, had an experience that left her shattered. Her patient was a woman in her early 30s with rheumatic heart disease.