AONL
Content by and about the American Organization for Nursing Leadership (AONL).
Sixty-two members of the Nursing Community Coalition, including AONL, signed onto written testimony submitted this week to the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies.
A participant in the AONL Nurse Manager Fellowship published a study in the April issue of Nurse Leader showing how an interprofessional team effectively decreased central line-associated bloodstream infections in a cardiac care unit at Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago.
AONL developed its workforce compendium to support nurse leaders by focusing on how to attract, re-engage and help nurse leaders thrive, according to AONL Senior Director of Professional Practice Rhonda Hughes, PhD, RN.
Mandating federal staffing ratios for nursing homes would accelerate the labor shortage across the continuum of care and reduce access to care for older Americans, according to the American Hospital Association and the American Health Care Association.
In Becker’s Hospital Review, AONL CEO Robyn Begley explains the organization’s opposition to mandatory nurse-staffing ratios.
AONL and George Washington University conducted a pilot program with 20 CNOs to improve their communication and media engagement strategy skills.
Frontline Nurse managers have become the “shock absorbers’ for their staff during the pandemic. To give them better tools and support their work, this podcast looks at a redesign of the frontline nursing model; how individual nurse managers can be empowered and supported; and how a centralization…
The declining number of available pediatric beds, coupled with a workforce shortage in skilled nursing and a skyrocketing mental health crisis among children and adolescents, are limiting pediatric care access.
The expanded availability of opioid use disorder-related telehealth services and medications during the pandemic was linked to a reduced likelihood of fatal drug overdoses among Medicare beneficiaries, a study found.
Patient-safety education programs can improve the patient-safety culture of health care professionals, but repeated trainings may be needed to sustain the interventions, a study found.