Thirty global experts in the field of advanced nursing and health services research gathered at Columbia Nursing for the ARNP conference hosted by HDRI.
Pre and postdoctoral trainees who receive one-on-one grant writing support are twice as likely to have their research projects funded, show new findings from Columbia Nursing.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, a unit of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, has awarded grants to two research programs at Columbia University School of Nursing.
As a charge nurse in the pediatric diagnostic and imaging center at NY-Presbyterian Children’s Hospital, Dan Hogan, MSN, knew that kids often feel anxious about undergoing magnetic resonance imaging.
A first-generation college student, Billy Caceres, PhD, didn’t start out on the nursing path; his undergraduate senior thesis was on media politics and minority representation.
Millions of active and retired servicemen and women, their families, and civilians rely on federal nurses for care, which includes nurses in uniformed service and Veterans Affairs nurses.
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.