Find National Nurse-Led Care Consortium resources listed below. Some locked items can be accessed by clicking on the item and completing a form. Scroll over locked items to see how you can access them.
During this training we will review what is known about LGBTQ+ cancer health disparities and cancer screening guidelines for LGBTQ+ communities. We will also share results from Out: The National Cancer Survey including data and stories from LGBTQ cancer survivors as well as best practices and practitioner level interventions to improve cancer care to LGBTQ+ communities.
This is part two of a three-part webinar series that will discuss the impact of community violence on the mental health of patient and health center staff, and showcase health center-based violence prevention and intervention strategies.
The purpose of this evaluation is to provide information to the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium (NNCC) and involved stakeholders regarding the implementation and outcomes associated with the Community College of Philadelphia (CCP) Community Clinical Rotation in partnership with the Philadelphia Hepatitis Outreach Project (PHOP).
This is part one of a three-part webinar series that will discuss the impact of community violence on the mental health of patients and health center staff, and showcase health center-based violence prevention and intervention strategies.
In this session, participants learned about recent studies supporting the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy. Speakers identitifed common concerns patients cite when hesitant to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in pregnancy, and strategies for talking to patients, friends and family to encourage vaccination while pregnant.
Maureen Boardman, MSN, FNP-C, FAANP, Clinical-Research Director, and Jaime Riley, LPN, COVID Vaccine Coordinator, of Little Rivers Healthcare, share community outreach strategies, messaging considerations for promoting vaccine confidence, and best practices for FQHC that serve as vaccine sites in rural communities.
This session covers the COVID-19 vaccination experience at Hawai‘i Pacific Health. We also learn about their successful mobile vaccination program, with direct youth engagement, at schools and community centers and share strategies to build these innovative partnerships in your community.
Learn from Phoenix Matthews, PhD, Associate Dean for Equity and Inclusion Professor of Clinical Psychology at University of Illinois at Chicago, and their research in understanding and intervening on the factors associated with health inequalities among socially marginalized populations. We explored the compounded challenges nurses are facing in the healthcare space and community, including grief, institutional racism, and burnout.
This session helps prepare nurses to share information and stories on social media. We walk through the basics of individual social media channels as well as best practices for sharing your own content and engaging with others’.
This interactive workshop walks nurses through how to tell their personal COVID-19 vaccine story, how to construct a meaningful narrative, and how to share their story for the benefit of others.
Turning Points for Children (a Philadelphia-based program) hosted a town hall event to provide background information on the COVID-19 vaccine development process and its safety. Program parents, community members, and Turning Points for Children staff/clients had the opportunity to learn about the latest COVID-19 vaccine guidelines for children and teens and how best to address vaccine misinformation.
Letha M. Joseph, DNP, APRN, AGPCNP-BC and Reenu Varghese, DNP, APRN, FNP-C discuss evidence-based strategies to address medical misinformation and have effective vaccine conversations. We also learn about stages of change and highlight approaches for talking with clients who are in different stages of behavior modification.
Nurses on the front line share their insights on addressing vaccine hesitancy and lessons learned through COVID-19 while working with tribal communities. We hear on-the-ground strategies from Janet Reich, RN, MSHSA and Sausha Nells, RN, BSN, nurses on the Navajo reservation and Erin McCanlies, PhD, an epidemiologist who works on the Tribal Support Section in CDC.
In this session, we learned key insights to building and sustaining successful community partnerships to support the COVID response. We heard from Trey George, President and CEO of Topeka Housing Authority and Mari Tucker, RENEW Partnership Liaison at Washburn University School of Nursing, who shared more about their unique partnership and community-based approach.