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YOUR SOURCE FOR NATIONAL LEAGUE FOR NURSING & NURSING EDUCATION NEWS & UPDATES

The National League for Nursing offers professional development, networking opportunities, assessment services, nursing research grants, and public policy initiatives to nearly 45,000 individual and over 1,000 institutional members. NLN members represent nursing education programs across the spectrum of higher education, and health care organizations and agencies.

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Check out Nursing Education Perspectives, a peer-reviewed journal providing evidence for best practices in nursing education
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The NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted podcast highlights timely topics on innovation & transformation in nursing education

News Alerts

NLN & International Council of Nurses (ICN) Announce Collaboration to Advance Global Investment in Nursing Education

Sep 27, 2023, 08:00 AM by Mike Gmail Keaton
168 comments
New Initiative Revitalizes Committee of Experts to Share Best Practices & Opportunities in Nursing Education Worldwide

NLN & International Council of Nurses (ICN) Announce Collaboration to Advance Global Investment in Nursing Education

New Initiative Revitalizes Committee of Experts to Share Best Practices & Opportunities in Nursing Education Worldwide

 

Washington, DC — Two leading professional organizations in nursing, the National League for Nursing and the International Council of Nurses (ICN), have teamed up to promote an initiative to prioritize broad-scale investment in nursing education: the ICN Education Experts Advisory Committee (ICNEE). The new committee is a reformulation of a group originally established by the League and ICN in 2009 to share best practices and opportunities in nursing education worldwide, under ICN auspices.

The current iteration of the ICNEE will aim to create a plan to scale up the education of nurses around the world and ensure that the nursing workforce of the future is prepared to meet whatever challenges lie ahead. 

One immediate focus of the ICNEE will be its role in helping to shape the thinking around the soon-to-be-published second edition of the World Health Organization’s State of the World’s Nurses Report, produced in collaboration with the ICN. The ICNEE will encourage putting nursing education front and center in the publication’s messaging and content.

The ICNEE is to be housed within the NLN Institute for Diversity and Global Initiatives, under the leadership and management of Dr. Sandra Davis, deputy director of the NLN | Walden University College of Nursing Institute for Social Determinants of Health and Social Change. Dr. Davis will also serve for the next three years as the ICNEE’s chair.

The committee’s membership will consist of 14 individuals, 12 of whom will be chosen, based on ICN recommendations, to represent each of the World Health Organization’s six regions. They will be joined by two at-large members with expertise in global public health and nursing education.

NLN Chair Kathleen Poindexter, PhD, RN, CNE, ANEF, interim associate dean for academic affairs and assistant dean for undergraduate programs and faculty development at Michigan State University in Lansing, lauded the decision to relaunch the ICNEE. “In a time of extraordinary public health disasters, there is a dire need for resources that advance the education of nurses, our most trusted, frontline health care professionals.”

NLN President and CEO Beverly Malone, PhD, RN, FAAN, said, “With the new ICNEE, we may maximize the ICN’s historic role in disseminating knowledge and supporting the implementation of educational best practices. Additionally, the ICNEE will aid in addressing the well-being and professional development of nurse educators throughout the world. The need to recruit and retain qualified nurse faculty remains a root cause of the persistent worldwide shortage of nurses, one we hope the ICNEE will work to mitigate.”

ICN President, Dr. Pamela Cipriano, said the ICNEE would extend the impact of the ICN and National League for Nursing’s educational activities and initiatives. “The ICN was set up in 1899 to ensure that nurses around the world were united with each other and cooperating to raise the standards of nursing education and professional ethics so that nurses could bring their professional knowledge and skill to meet patients’ needs everywhere,” she said.

Dr. Cipriano added, “Reinvigorating the ICNEE will help us to continue with that noble cause for the benefit of individuals, families, and communities around the globe. I look forward to working with the committee once it is established, and I am sure it will make an important contribution to our shared goals of improving nursing education and recruiting many more nurse educators, who are so vital to this endeavor.”

The new ICNEE will be officially announced during NLN’s Education Summit, September 28-30 at National Harbor near Washington, DC. For more information about the National League for Nursing, visit NLN.org.

#####

About the National League for Nursing

Dedicated to excellence in nursing, the National League for Nursing is the premier organization for nurse faculty and leaders in nursing education. The NLN offers professional development, networking opportunities, testing services, nursing research grants, and public policy initiatives to its nearly 45,000 individual and 1,000 institutional members, comprising nursing education programs across the spectrum of higher education and health care organizations. Learn more at NLN.org.


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Contact

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Michael Keaton
Deputy Chief Communications Officer
mkeaton@nln.org
202-909-2544
Leslie Block
Managing Editor, Nursing Education Perspectives
Editor, NLN Member Update
lblock@nln.org
973-777-4491
India West
Digital Marketing Manager
iwest@nln.org
202-909-2505
Ann Marie Watson
Marketing & Communications Manager
awatson@nln.org
202-909-2504
Jane Rosen
Media Consultant
janeruth515@gmail.com
201-906-7339

For media inquiries, contact Michael Keaton, deputy chief communications officer.

Honors

APEX Award 2024

The National League for Nursing earned national recognition in the 2024 APEX Awards for Publication Excellence:

 

2024 Hermes Award WinnerHermes Platinum Award WinnerThe National League for Nursing and CNEA earned national honors in the 2024 Hermes Creative Awards:

AJN First Place 2023

 

A Systematic Approach to Evaluation of Nursing Programs, 2nd edition, edited by Marilyn H. Oermann, PhD, RN, FAAN, ANEF, awarded first place in the 2023 AJN Book of the Year Awards in the Nursing Education/Professional Development category.

AJN Second Place 2023

 

Clinical Simulations in Nursing Education: Advanced Concepts, Trends, and Opportunities, 2nd edition, edited by Pamela R. Jeffries, PhD, RN, FAAN, ANEF, FSSH, awarded second place in the 2023 AJN Book of the Year Awards in the Adult Primary Care category and third place in the Nursing Education/Professional Development category.


The NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted podcast earned Honorable Mention in the 2023 PR Daily Nonprofit Communications Awards in the Podcast category. 


The National League for Nursing earned national recognition in the 2023 APEX Awards for Publication Excellence:

  • Grand Award: NLN.org in the Website - Most Improved category
  • Award of Excellence: NLN.org in the Websites category
  • Award of Excellence: NLN Member Update in the Newsletters - Electronic & Email category

The National League for Nursing earned national honors in the 2023 Hermes Creative Awards:

  • Gold Winner: NLN.org in the Website Overall - Nonprofit category
  • Gold Winner: NLN.org in the Website Overall - Redesign category
  • Gold Winner: NLN Nursing EDge Unscripted podcast in the Podcast Series category
  • Gold Winner: NLN Accelerator in the E-Newsletter category
  • Honorable Mention: NLN.org Home Page in the Home Page category
  • Honorable Mention: NLN Education Summit Website in the Microsite category
  • Honorable Mention: NLN Member Update in the E-Newsletter category
  • Honorable Mention: NLN Look Ahead in the E-Newsletter category

The National League for Nursing earned national acclaim in the 2022 PR Daily Awards:

 

The 2022 Power of Association Gold Award Winner designation was presented to the National League for Nursing by the America Society for Association Executives (ASAE) for Taking Aim: Addressing Structural Racism, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, Implicit Bias & Social Justice.

Media Partner

HealthySimulation.com: Healthcare Simulation resource website with the latest news, job listings, product demos, learning courses, research highlights, conference coverage, and more

In the News

The Lancet

Beverly Malone: valuing diversity in nursing: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Healthcare Finance

Pair of bills seek to curb nursing shortage: Features NLN Information

Becker's Hospital Review

Lawmakers reintroduce Stop Nurse Shortages Act: Features NLN Information

Arizona Daily Sun

Spotlight on Nurse Educators: Features NLN Information

Forbes

How To Become An Emergency Room Nurse: Features NLN Information

Spectrum News

Is the U.S. ready for a 32-hour work week? Some lawmakers think so: Interviews of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone & Staff

Nurse.com

24 Nursing Certifications to Boost Your Career: Features NLN Information

McKnights Long-Term Care News

‘Dangerous’ trend requires different support for new and experienced nurses: expert panel: Features NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

ASAE Center for Association Leadership

Four-Day Flex Work a Win-Win for Nursing Association and Its Staff: Article by NLN Leadership

U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Data Deep Dive: A National Nursing Crisis: Features NLN Information

Fox News

Burnt out and getting out: American hospitals struggle with increasing shortage of nurses: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Becker's Hospital Review

Meet the 6 nurse 'living legends' named by the American Academy of Nursing: Features NLN Chief Program Officer Dr. Janice Brewington

Minority Nurse Magazine

The National League for Nursing: Connecting the Academic and Clinical Worlds for 130 Years: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

TheBodyPro

Developing LGBTQ+ Education for Nursing Programs: Features NLN Information

AZ Big Media

How to advance your career in nursing to the next stage: Features NLN Information

Nurse.com

10 Side Hustles for Nurses: Features NLN Information

Atlanta Journal-Constitution

National League for Nursing remains leader to U.S. nurses for 130 years: Features NLN Information

MedPage Today

Operation Nightingale: State Nursing Boards React to the Fake Diploma Scheme: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Digital Connect Mag

How To Become A Family Nurse Practitioner: Features NLN Information

Daily Nurse

Offering a Vision on Climate Change and Nursing: Interview of NLN Experts

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

We’re running out of nurses. Here’s what we must do: Features NLN Research

Fortune Magazine

What type of experience do you need to enroll in an online master’s in nursing (MSN) program?: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone & Features NLN Research

Millenial Magazine

How To Boost Your Career Prospects As A Nursing Student: Features NLN Information

HealthTech

How Healthcare Organizations Can Overcome Staff Shortages: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

HealthTech

30 Healthcare IT Influencers Worth a Follow in 2022: Features NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Celebrating Leading Women in Higher Education: Features NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

WomensBiz

Power Package: Inspiring a Nation of Nurses: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

HealthTech

3 Nursing Tech Trends to Watch in 2022: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Scripps National News

Nursing educator shortage: TV Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

The Lund Report

The Pandemic Changed How Nursing Schools Use Simulation: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

New York Times

Biden Opens New Federal Office for Climate Change, Health and Equity: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

NPR Here & Now

Medical Organizations Push For Health Care Institutions To Implement COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates: Radio Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

NBC Nightly News

Hospitals overwhelmed amid surge in new Covid patients: Features NLN Information

Scripps National News

More VR and online courses becoming part of nursing education in the future: TV Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Essence

Creating Healthier Outcomes for POC: Features NLN Information

Scripps National News

Nursing education addressing systemic racism in health care: TV Interview of NLN Experts

New York Times

‘It was like a war call’: Applications to nursing schools rose during the pandemic: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Kaiser Health News

COVID-19 'didn't scare me away': Nursing schools see enrollment bump amid pandemic: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

U.S. News & World Report

How Coronavirus Affects Nursing School Admissions: Features NLN Information

Daily Nurse

Nurses on the Frontlines of COVID-19: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Community College Daily

Urgently needed, but facing hurdles to complete: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Becker's Hospital Review

70 African American leaders in healthcare to know: Features NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

New York Daily News

Photo of exhausted nurse goes viral with praise for healers: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Nurse.com

Nursing Staff Development Ideas Worth Investing In: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Nurse.com

Make ‘Cents’ of Nurse Pay to Recruit Quality Candidates: Interview of NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

The Hill

Understanding social reasons for poor health helps to fix inequality: Op-ed by NLN President & CEO Dr. Beverly Malone

Archived News Releases & Statements

NLN & International Council of Nurses (ICN) Announce Collaboration to Advance Global Investment in Nursing Education

Sep 27, 2023, 08:00 AM by Mike Gmail Keaton
168 comments
New Initiative Revitalizes Committee of Experts to Share Best Practices & Opportunities in Nursing Education Worldwide

NLN & International Council of Nurses (ICN) Announce Collaboration to Advance Global Investment in Nursing Education

New Initiative Revitalizes Committee of Experts to Share Best Practices & Opportunities in Nursing Education Worldwide

 

Washington, DC — Two leading professional organizations in nursing, the National League for Nursing and the International Council of Nurses (ICN), have teamed up to promote an initiative to prioritize broad-scale investment in nursing education: the ICN Education Experts Advisory Committee (ICNEE). The new committee is a reformulation of a group originally established by the League and ICN in 2009 to share best practices and opportunities in nursing education worldwide, under ICN auspices.

The current iteration of the ICNEE will aim to create a plan to scale up the education of nurses around the world and ensure that the nursing workforce of the future is prepared to meet whatever challenges lie ahead. 

One immediate focus of the ICNEE will be its role in helping to shape the thinking around the soon-to-be-published second edition of the World Health Organization’s State of the World’s Nurses Report, produced in collaboration with the ICN. The ICNEE will encourage putting nursing education front and center in the publication’s messaging and content.

The ICNEE is to be housed within the NLN Institute for Diversity and Global Initiatives, under the leadership and management of Dr. Sandra Davis, deputy director of the NLN | Walden University College of Nursing Institute for Social Determinants of Health and Social Change. Dr. Davis will also serve for the next three years as the ICNEE’s chair.

The committee’s membership will consist of 14 individuals, 12 of whom will be chosen, based on ICN recommendations, to represent each of the World Health Organization’s six regions. They will be joined by two at-large members with expertise in global public health and nursing education.

NLN Chair Kathleen Poindexter, PhD, RN, CNE, ANEF, interim associate dean for academic affairs and assistant dean for undergraduate programs and faculty development at Michigan State University in Lansing, lauded the decision to relaunch the ICNEE. “In a time of extraordinary public health disasters, there is a dire need for resources that advance the education of nurses, our most trusted, frontline health care professionals.”

NLN President and CEO Beverly Malone, PhD, RN, FAAN, said, “With the new ICNEE, we may maximize the ICN’s historic role in disseminating knowledge and supporting the implementation of educational best practices. Additionally, the ICNEE will aid in addressing the well-being and professional development of nurse educators throughout the world. The need to recruit and retain qualified nurse faculty remains a root cause of the persistent worldwide shortage of nurses, one we hope the ICNEE will work to mitigate.”

ICN President, Dr. Pamela Cipriano, said the ICNEE would extend the impact of the ICN and National League for Nursing’s educational activities and initiatives. “The ICN was set up in 1899 to ensure that nurses around the world were united with each other and cooperating to raise the standards of nursing education and professional ethics so that nurses could bring their professional knowledge and skill to meet patients’ needs everywhere,” she said.

Dr. Cipriano added, “Reinvigorating the ICNEE will help us to continue with that noble cause for the benefit of individuals, families, and communities around the globe. I look forward to working with the committee once it is established, and I am sure it will make an important contribution to our shared goals of improving nursing education and recruiting many more nurse educators, who are so vital to this endeavor.”

The new ICNEE will be officially announced during NLN’s Education Summit, September 28-30 at National Harbor near Washington, DC. For more information about the National League for Nursing, visit NLN.org.

#####

About the National League for Nursing

Dedicated to excellence in nursing, the National League for Nursing is the premier organization for nurse faculty and leaders in nursing education. The NLN offers professional development, networking opportunities, testing services, nursing research grants, and public policy initiatives to its nearly 45,000 individual and 1,000 institutional members, comprising nursing education programs across the spectrum of higher education and health care organizations. Learn more at NLN.org.


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