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The latest stories from AHA Today.

An often-silent contributor to adverse maternal mental health in the U.S. is the mistreatment of women during pregnancy and delivery by health care workers.
In an American Hospital Association podcast, leaders from Philippi, W.V.-based Broaddus Hospital discuss how it is meeting the behavioral health needs of older adults through an intensive outpatient group therapy program.
Nurse leaders can register to attend the American Hospital Association Leadership Summit from July 21-23 in San Diego.
A Kentucky law (HB 159) shields nurses and other health care workers from criminal punishments for making honest mistakes while providing care.
The American Health Care Association filed a lawsuit earlier this month urging a federal court to overturn the Biden Administration’s mandatory minimum staffing requirements on nursing homes.
The American Association of Colleges of Nursing released a white paper for nursing educators providing guidance on competency-based education and learning assessment.
Nurses entering the hospice field often are unprepared for the quantity and complexity of emotional, physical and spiritual needs among the dying population, making onboarding programs necessary.
Allegheny Health Network is seeing burnout rates below the national average from its six-year effort to improve the well-being of advance practice providers, nurses and physicians.
Hospitals should reconnect nurses to their original calling of providing compassionate care to patients to reduce burnout, write AONL members and Press Ganey employees Nora Warshawsky, PhD, RN, a nurse scientist, and Mary Jo Assi, DNP, RN, associate CNO.
Mount Sinai Health System wants to expand its virtual nursing program platform to include other hospital departments to streamline care coordination.