Showing posts with label Australia Event Nursing Conferences 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia Event Nursing Conferences 2019. Show all posts

Monday, 25 February 2019

June 21-22, 2019 | Brisbane, Australia

6 Nurses You Should Know About:

It’s always a perfect time to shine a spotlight on the nation’s almost four million registered nurses and licensed practical nurses. These men and women step up to the plate every day and do the hard work that needs to be done, and they do it with compassion, intelligence, great skill, and finesse. Here are six individuals that are changing the face of health and healthcare through nursing.

1. Susan B. Hassmiller, Ph.D., RN, FAAN works to ensure that America’s nursing workforce is strong and empowered so that we can all live healthier lives. She does this, in part, by directing the Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action, a 50-state initiative that supports a system in which nurses are essential partners in providing care and promoting health. She is also co-director of the Future of Nursing Scholars program, which provides scholarships, mentoring and leadership development for new nurses as well as nurse educators and researchers. Dr. Hassmiller served with the Health Resources and Services Administration as executive director of the U.S. Public Health Service Primary Care Policy Fellowship. In this role, she addressed national and international healthcare initiatives. She is the recipient of many awards including the Florence Nightingale Medal, the highest international honor given to a nurse by the International Committee of the Red Cross.

2. Robert G. Hess, Jr, Ph.D., RN, FAAN is empowering nurses to be strong and effective advocates for their patients through what is known as shared governance. Patients often assume nurses are empowered to make decisions in their best interest. However, sometimes nurses’ decisions are superseded by managers, administrators, and others far from the point of care who don’t have the expertise or information to coordinate patients’ total care. Shared governance ensures that bedside nurses are true stakeholders and collaborators of care. Dr. Hess is Founder and CEO of the Forum for Shared Governance www.sharedgovernance.org, coauthor of the sole book on implementing shared governance, and the world’s leading researcher on the subject. He is also Executive Vice President, Chief Clinical Executive, for On Course Learning www.oncourselearning.com, Healthcare, the largest provider of continuing education in the world for nurses as well as 23 additional health professions. They publish Nurse.com (formerly Nursing Spectrum and Nurse week) and Continuingeducation.com.

3. Diana J. Mason, Ph.D., RN, FAAN has been a vocal and high-profile advocate for improving health and healthcare by bridging nursing with public policy, politics, and the media – a powerful combination. Dr. Mason is the immediate past president of the American Academy of Nursing – an organization of nurse leaders is former editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Nursing and was co-producer and moderator for many years of Healthstyles, a weekly radio show on health issues. She is now the producer and moderator of HealthCetera in the Catskills, WIOX Radio. Dr. Mason is the lead editor of the award-winning book, Policy and Politics in Nursing and Health Care, now in its seventh edition. Her academic work focuses on health policy and what can be learned from nurse-designed models of care. She is Professor Emerita at Hunter College, City University of New York. She is the Senior Service Policy Professor, Center for Health Policy and Media Engagement, George Washington University School of Nursing.

4. Barbara Glickstein, MPH, MS, RN combines roles as a public health nurse, health policy expert, and broadcast journalist to expand, elevate, and honor the role and image of nurses and advance their vital work to improve health and health care for the public. She is Director of Communications, Media Projects at the Center for Health Policy and Media Engagement at George Washington University School of Nursing. Ms. Glickstein co-produces and hosts the podcast HealthCetera. As a nursing consultant and advisor for Carolyn Jones Productions, she worked on the documentaries The American Nurse, Defining Hope and the multimedia project Dying in America: Nurses Leading the Conversation. Ms. Glickstein has trained national leaders in healthcare on how to be a media maker to advance the health of the public and public policy. She has produced programming for Martha Stewart Radio and completed a Progressive Women’s Voices fellowship with the Women’s Media Center in 2009.

5. Betty Smith Williams, PH, MN, MSN, RN, FAAN has been a leader, mentor, role model, change agent and activist, empowering black and ethnic minority nurses to be leaders in health policy, practice, education, and research. She has also advocated for more accessible and culturally appropriate care for ethnic minorities. Dr. Williams has done this in part by co-founding and serving as president of both the National Black Nurses Association (NBNA) and the National Coalition of Ethnic Minority Nurse Associations, Inc. (NCEMNA). She became the first black graduate of the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve University. She also went on to become the first black person to teach at either a college or university in the entire state of California. Dr. Williams has been listed among the 100+ Influential Organization Leaders by Ebony magazine. In 1989, the UCLA School of Public Health established the Betty Smith Williams Scholarship for the graduate education of African American students.

6. Michelle Podlesni, RN is devoted to the empowerment of nurses through entrepreneurship. She is an accomplished businesswoman, U.S. Navy veteran, and nurse with over 30 years’ experience. She is president of the National Nurses in Business Association (NNBA) www.NNBANow.com which is dedicated to advancing and expanding nurse’s role in business. NNBA provides nurses with business education, strategies, and best practices along with an extensive network of colleagues and resources helping nurses navigate the journey to entrepreneurial success. NNBA’s Annual Educational Conference on Nurse Entrepreneurship and Career Alternatives is held each autumn and attended by nurses, business owners, authors, inventors, consultants, educators and those who wish to expand their horizons and opportunities within nursing. Ms. Podlesni and NNBA have assisted thousands of nurses to launch, build, and manage their own businesses. 

For further information, please check the conference website: 

Tuesday, 8 January 2019

Nursing and Health Care Conferences in Brisbane, Australia | World Nursing Congress 2019 | Nursing Conferences 2019

Nursing and Health Care Conferences in Brisbane, Australia | World Nursing Congress 2019 | Nursing Conferences 2019

ISLAMABAD: President Dr Arif Alvi on Tuesday declared 2019 the year of nursing in Pakistan to highlight the significant role played by people associated with the nursing and midwifery profession.

He also announced launch of the ‘Nursing Now’ chapter of Pakistan, an ambitious project of the Nursing Now campaign which kick-started worldwide in collaboration with the World Health Organisation (WHO) and International Council of Nurses, with the aim to raise the status and profile of nursing.

The president made these announcements at the first Pakistan Nursing and Midwifery summit and the launch of Nursing Now Pakistan campaign ceremony held at Aiwan-e-Sadr, Islamabad.

President Alvi said the nursing profession is regarded as the backbone of the healthcare sector, and stressed the need for proper education, training and capacity building of the women associated with the nursing and midwifery services, besides imparting them with leadership roles.

The president announced that nursing diplomas would be replaced with degree programmes and the government remains committed to double the strength of people in the nursing sector within two years.

World Nursing Congress 2019
https://nursingcongress.nursingconference.com/registration.php

A national nursing university would be established in Islamabad to provide training to 25,000 people yearly, he informed.

Linking the issue of poverty with health, the president underlined the role of health professionals and nurses in alleviating the suffering of ailing humanity and cited certain challenges in the health sector including the issue of stunted growth.

President Alvi said that by observing the nursing year in Pakistan, the government would highlight the contributions made by the people associated with this field.

He noted that when the country has a healthy population, it would grow economically and lead to prosperity.

Lauding the role of Minister for National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination, Aamir Mehmood Kiani, the president assured that the government and he himself would continue playing an effective role in uplifting the nursing profession.

The president also stressed upon the need to increase the number of nurses to properly look after patients.

He highlighted the need for provision of a harassment-free environment to women preferring to adopt the nursing and midwifery profession and called for their protection, so that they could perform their noble cause without any stress.

The president also announced that the government would provide scholarships to students and nurses.

Addressing the ceremony, Minister for National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination Aamir Mehmood Kiani lauded the services and contributions made by the nurses in the health sector and said the government is committed to delivering results in the health sector in the years ahead.

He informed that a nursing university would be established on the land of National Institute of Health (NIH) and said shortage of nurses would be overcome.

Kiani also assured to resolve the issues confronted by nurses as it was the top priority of the government.

Director-General WHO, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and representative of Nursing Now, said the campaign running in 70 countries across the globe would focus on the core areas by enhancing the role and voice of nurses and midwives in health policy-making, encouraging investment in the nursing workforce, and recruiting more nurses into leadership roles with focus on research, proper training and the best nursing practices.