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Invitation to Hear Announcement of
Initiative on the Future of Nursing Recommendations

Co-Director, Dr. Diana Mason will in Washington, DC on October 5th for the  findings from the report by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Initiative on the Future of Nursing at the Institute of Medicine. She’ll be  blogging live from the meeting. You can join her via audio webcast at the briefing at the National Press Club.

The Committee has worked to develop a blueprint for using nurse-led models of innovation to improve the health care system in the U.S. The recommendations will address a range of system changes, including innovative ways to improve health care quality and address the health care work force shortage that continues to threaten the availability and quality of care for all Americans.

Leading the briefing will be Donna E. Shalala, Ph.D., FAAN, Committee Chair and Linda Burnes Bolton, Dr.P.H., R.N., FAAN, Committee Vice Chair. They will be joined by Harvey V. Fineberg, M.D., Ph.D., President, Institute of Medicine, Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, M.D., M.B.A., President and CEO, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and additional Committee members.

Please register here for the audio webcast.

A link to the audio webcast will be posted on www.iom.edu/nursing the morning of Oct. 5.

** Follow the briefing live on Twitter at http://twitter.com/FutureofNursing **

September 27, 2010

Invitation to Hear Announcement of Initiative on

This is not about me clarifying anything. It’s about me getting confused. Maybe you can supply the insights.  I’ll supply the confusion.

Tonight I was watching a baseball game. The New York Yankees played The Tampa Bay Rays in a crucial late season game. The game was a disaster for the Yanks. But the real action was in the first inning, when what I have come to call a CHMP alarm went off.

Funny about these CHMP alerts.  They seem to go off more frequently in media settings that are not specifically health related.   Explicit and implicit messages about disease and illness are pervasive. Sometimes they come in the form of an intentional message and sometimes they are embodied in a person you confront on the street whose appearance catches your attention. All sorts of institutions and individuals completely outside the realm of health care are often in the position of providing health-related information. You just never know when the alarm will sound and you will be confronted with a CHMP-worthy insight.

This is not about me clarifying anything. It’s about me getting confused. Maybe you can supply the insights.  I’ll supply the confusion.

Tonight I was watching a baseball game. The New York Yankees played The Tampa Bay Rays in a crucial late season game. The game was a disaster for the Yanks. But the real action was in the first inning, when what I have come to call a CHMP alarm went off.

Funny about these CHMP alerts.  They seem to go off more frequently in media settings that are not specifically health related.   Explicit and implicit messages about disease and illness are pervasive. Sometimes they come in the form of an intentional message and sometimes they are embodied in a person you confront on the street whose appearance catches your attention. All sorts of institutions and individuals completely outside the realm of health care are often in the position of providing health-related information. You just never know when the alarm will sound and you will be confronted with a CHMP-worthy insight.

President Obama

The White House launched a new web site 50 Stories/50 states yesterday inviting Americans to post their stories on how the Affordable Care Act impacts their lives. You can listen to these stories while clicking through the critical facts about how health care reform in each state.  Post your story here and share your comments with us too!

[caption id="attachment_544" align="alignleft" width="150" caption="President Obama "][/caption] The