Columbia School of Nursing hosted its second annual Scholars’ Day. The event showcased the work of PhD students, postdoctoral fellows, Academic-Practice Research Fellows, and research staff.
In health policy roles, government posts, and the voting booth, Columbia Nurses are stepping up to advocate for patients, populations, and their profession.
Opening up to family members about sexual identity may reduce mortality risk for sexual minority women, according to new findings in a study by Tonda Hughes, PhD.
Nursing homes’ use of telehealth increased more than elevenfold after Medicare eased rules and regulations on virtual care, according to new findings from Columbia Nursing.
Sexual and gender minority adults face psychological and social stressors that may contribute to worse cardiovascular health according to a study by Billy Caceres, PhD.
Columbia Nursing’s new Center for Research on People of Color was established to examine the effects of racism on health and seek solutions that will overturn centuries of inequities.
New research by Patricia Stone, PhD, found that nursing homes (NHs) with Black residents had higher rates of COVID-19 infection and deaths during the first wave of the pandemic.
Third-year PhD student April Ancheta spoke with the Journal of School Nursing about her new manuscript, on school climate and mental health among LGBTQ adolescents.