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Autor:
Briggs NL; Author Affiliations: Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Ms Briggs); Departments of Global Health and Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Dr Guthrie); Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Dr Elder); Department of Health Systems and Population Health (Ms Revere), Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Ms Molino); Office of Innovation and Technology, Washington State Department of Health, Tumwater, Washington (Mss West and Higgins);Office of Innovation and Technology, Washington State Department of Health, Tumwater and Department of Health Systems and Population Health, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Dr Karras); and Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington (Dr Baseman)., Guthrie BL, Elder AS, Revere D, Molino AR, West LM, Higgins A, Karras BT, Baseman JG
Publikováno v:
Journal of public health management and practice : JPHMP [J Public Health Manag Pract] 2024 Dec 13. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Dec 13.
Autor:
Sarver MJ; Author Affiliations: Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Sarver Better Living Products LLC, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Outpatient Infusion Center, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, Washington (McManus); Nursing Services, Medical Oncology, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Toler); Everett Community College, Everett, Washington (Toler); Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Johnson).; Mary Jo Sarver, MN, ARNP, AOCN, CRNI, VA-BC, LNC, is a nurse practitioner at Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington. Ms Sarver has more than 37 years of experience in infusion therapy and oncology/hematology care. Her role focuses on continuity of care and seamless transitions for patients within and outside the acute care setting. She collaborates and acts as a consultant locally and on a system level for Providence, guiding staff development, competency assessment, and process improvement to improve outcomes in multiple areas of clinical practice, and new graduate transition to practice. She attends cancer care conferences, rounds in the clinics and hospital, and actively consults and sees patients and families for treatment and care planning. She has published, conducted research, and spoken on multiple topics within the United States. For decades, passion has prompted her to participate both locally on the PSINS, PSONS, and ACS boards and nationally assume various roles through INS and ONS. She is CEO of Sarver Better Living, a family-run company. Monica McManus, MHA, BSN, RN, OCN, is the assistant nurse manager for an Outpatient Infusion Center at the University of Washington Medical Center. Ms McManus has been working in the nursing profession since 2009. She has expertise in oncology and intensive care nursing. She has functioned in several nursing leadership roles, as assistant nurse manager for inpatient oncology, manager for inpatient Oncology and Surgical Services, and in her current role as assistant nurse manager in Outpatient Infusion. She has published on topics to help improve oncology nursing documentation and on central venous access devices. She has an interest in nursing leadership and in helping to enhance the nursing profession through continued research on quality improvement for oncology and infusion nursing. John Toler, MSN, RN, is an administrative supervisor of Nursing Services; a registered nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett; and an associate faculty of Nursing Services at Everett Community College. Mr Toler has 15 years of experience in oncology/hematology care, 3 years in administrative nursing supervision, 3 years in clinical instruction in nursing education, and prior management experience, including the director of nursing services. He is the recipient of several nursing awards, including Nurse of the Year for Innovation within the Providence/Swedish community, and the Faculty Daisy Award in Nursing Education in 2022. His roles transcend several areas of nursing, including leadership, education, mentorship, innovation, research, community relations and development, and direct patient care in the acute care setting. His passion for research and innovation has led to various improvements in operational efficiency, policy revisions, educational system developments, and positive patient outcomes. He continues to volunteer time to the nursing community through educational lectures and clinical precepting for graduates pursuing bachelor's and master's degrees. Bethany Johnson, BSN, RN, OCN, is a nurse educator at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, (PRMCE) in Everett, Washington. Ms Johnson has worked for more than 15 years as a nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett. This year, she transitioned into the role of nurse educator. She works on a system level, developing and teaching new hire education, and on a hospital level as a hands-on resource. As a nurse leader, she has served on and chaired several committees within the institution. She is pursuing advanced education and has obtained her certification in oncology. She has published on quality improvement, presented a poster, and participated on an expert panel. The poster presentation at the Providence Saint Joseph Hospital (PSJH) research conference received the Most Innovative Clinical Award., McManus M; Author Affiliations: Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Sarver Better Living Products LLC, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Outpatient Infusion Center, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, Washington (McManus); Nursing Services, Medical Oncology, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Toler); Everett Community College, Everett, Washington (Toler); Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Johnson).; Mary Jo Sarver, MN, ARNP, AOCN, CRNI, VA-BC, LNC, is a nurse practitioner at Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington. Ms Sarver has more than 37 years of experience in infusion therapy and oncology/hematology care. Her role focuses on continuity of care and seamless transitions for patients within and outside the acute care setting. She collaborates and acts as a consultant locally and on a system level for Providence, guiding staff development, competency assessment, and process improvement to improve outcomes in multiple areas of clinical practice, and new graduate transition to practice. She attends cancer care conferences, rounds in the clinics and hospital, and actively consults and sees patients and families for treatment and care planning. She has published, conducted research, and spoken on multiple topics within the United States. For decades, passion has prompted her to participate both locally on the PSINS, PSONS, and ACS boards and nationally assume various roles through INS and ONS. She is CEO of Sarver Better Living, a family-run company. Monica McManus, MHA, BSN, RN, OCN, is the assistant nurse manager for an Outpatient Infusion Center at the University of Washington Medical Center. Ms McManus has been working in the nursing profession since 2009. She has expertise in oncology and intensive care nursing. She has functioned in several nursing leadership roles, as assistant nurse manager for inpatient oncology, manager for inpatient Oncology and Surgical Services, and in her current role as assistant nurse manager in Outpatient Infusion. She has published on topics to help improve oncology nursing documentation and on central venous access devices. She has an interest in nursing leadership and in helping to enhance the nursing profession through continued research on quality improvement for oncology and infusion nursing. John Toler, MSN, RN, is an administrative supervisor of Nursing Services; a registered nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett; and an associate faculty of Nursing Services at Everett Community College. Mr Toler has 15 years of experience in oncology/hematology care, 3 years in administrative nursing supervision, 3 years in clinical instruction in nursing education, and prior management experience, including the director of nursing services. He is the recipient of several nursing awards, including Nurse of the Year for Innovation within the Providence/Swedish community, and the Faculty Daisy Award in Nursing Education in 2022. His roles transcend several areas of nursing, including leadership, education, mentorship, innovation, research, community relations and development, and direct patient care in the acute care setting. His passion for research and innovation has led to various improvements in operational efficiency, policy revisions, educational system developments, and positive patient outcomes. He continues to volunteer time to the nursing community through educational lectures and clinical precepting for graduates pursuing bachelor's and master's degrees. Bethany Johnson, BSN, RN, OCN, is a nurse educator at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, (PRMCE) in Everett, Washington. Ms Johnson has worked for more than 15 years as a nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett. This year, she transitioned into the role of nurse educator. She works on a system level, developing and teaching new hire education, and on a hospital level as a hands-on resource. As a nurse leader, she has served on and chaired several committees within the institution. She is pursuing advanced education and has obtained her certification in oncology. She has published on quality improvement, presented a poster, and participated on an expert panel. The poster presentation at the Providence Saint Joseph Hospital (PSJH) research conference received the Most Innovative Clinical Award., Toler J; Author Affiliations: Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Sarver Better Living Products LLC, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Outpatient Infusion Center, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, Washington (McManus); Nursing Services, Medical Oncology, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Toler); Everett Community College, Everett, Washington (Toler); Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Johnson).; Mary Jo Sarver, MN, ARNP, AOCN, CRNI, VA-BC, LNC, is a nurse practitioner at Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington. Ms Sarver has more than 37 years of experience in infusion therapy and oncology/hematology care. Her role focuses on continuity of care and seamless transitions for patients within and outside the acute care setting. She collaborates and acts as a consultant locally and on a system level for Providence, guiding staff development, competency assessment, and process improvement to improve outcomes in multiple areas of clinical practice, and new graduate transition to practice. She attends cancer care conferences, rounds in the clinics and hospital, and actively consults and sees patients and families for treatment and care planning. She has published, conducted research, and spoken on multiple topics within the United States. For decades, passion has prompted her to participate both locally on the PSINS, PSONS, and ACS boards and nationally assume various roles through INS and ONS. She is CEO of Sarver Better Living, a family-run company. Monica McManus, MHA, BSN, RN, OCN, is the assistant nurse manager for an Outpatient Infusion Center at the University of Washington Medical Center. Ms McManus has been working in the nursing profession since 2009. She has expertise in oncology and intensive care nursing. She has functioned in several nursing leadership roles, as assistant nurse manager for inpatient oncology, manager for inpatient Oncology and Surgical Services, and in her current role as assistant nurse manager in Outpatient Infusion. She has published on topics to help improve oncology nursing documentation and on central venous access devices. She has an interest in nursing leadership and in helping to enhance the nursing profession through continued research on quality improvement for oncology and infusion nursing. John Toler, MSN, RN, is an administrative supervisor of Nursing Services; a registered nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett; and an associate faculty of Nursing Services at Everett Community College. Mr Toler has 15 years of experience in oncology/hematology care, 3 years in administrative nursing supervision, 3 years in clinical instruction in nursing education, and prior management experience, including the director of nursing services. He is the recipient of several nursing awards, including Nurse of the Year for Innovation within the Providence/Swedish community, and the Faculty Daisy Award in Nursing Education in 2022. His roles transcend several areas of nursing, including leadership, education, mentorship, innovation, research, community relations and development, and direct patient care in the acute care setting. His passion for research and innovation has led to various improvements in operational efficiency, policy revisions, educational system developments, and positive patient outcomes. He continues to volunteer time to the nursing community through educational lectures and clinical precepting for graduates pursuing bachelor's and master's degrees. Bethany Johnson, BSN, RN, OCN, is a nurse educator at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, (PRMCE) in Everett, Washington. Ms Johnson has worked for more than 15 years as a nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett. This year, she transitioned into the role of nurse educator. She works on a system level, developing and teaching new hire education, and on a hospital level as a hands-on resource. As a nurse leader, she has served on and chaired several committees within the institution. She is pursuing advanced education and has obtained her certification in oncology. She has published on quality improvement, presented a poster, and participated on an expert panel. The poster presentation at the Providence Saint Joseph Hospital (PSJH) research conference received the Most Innovative Clinical Award., Johnson B; Author Affiliations: Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Sarver Better Living Products LLC, Everett, Washington (Sarver); Outpatient Infusion Center, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, Washington (McManus); Nursing Services, Medical Oncology, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Toler); Everett Community College, Everett, Washington (Toler); Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Johnson).; Mary Jo Sarver, MN, ARNP, AOCN, CRNI, VA-BC, LNC, is a nurse practitioner at Oncology and Infusion Services, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Cancer Partnership, Everett, Washington. Ms Sarver has more than 37 years of experience in infusion therapy and oncology/hematology care. Her role focuses on continuity of care and seamless transitions for patients within and outside the acute care setting. She collaborates and acts as a consultant locally and on a system level for Providence, guiding staff development, competency assessment, and process improvement to improve outcomes in multiple areas of clinical practice, and new graduate transition to practice. She attends cancer care conferences, rounds in the clinics and hospital, and actively consults and sees patients and families for treatment and care planning. She has published, conducted research, and spoken on multiple topics within the United States. For decades, passion has prompted her to participate both locally on the PSINS, PSONS, and ACS boards and nationally assume various roles through INS and ONS. She is CEO of Sarver Better Living, a family-run company. Monica McManus, MHA, BSN, RN, OCN, is the assistant nurse manager for an Outpatient Infusion Center at the University of Washington Medical Center. Ms McManus has been working in the nursing profession since 2009. She has expertise in oncology and intensive care nursing. She has functioned in several nursing leadership roles, as assistant nurse manager for inpatient oncology, manager for inpatient Oncology and Surgical Services, and in her current role as assistant nurse manager in Outpatient Infusion. She has published on topics to help improve oncology nursing documentation and on central venous access devices. She has an interest in nursing leadership and in helping to enhance the nursing profession through continued research on quality improvement for oncology and infusion nursing. John Toler, MSN, RN, is an administrative supervisor of Nursing Services; a registered nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett; and an associate faculty of Nursing Services at Everett Community College. Mr Toler has 15 years of experience in oncology/hematology care, 3 years in administrative nursing supervision, 3 years in clinical instruction in nursing education, and prior management experience, including the director of nursing services. He is the recipient of several nursing awards, including Nurse of the Year for Innovation within the Providence/Swedish community, and the Faculty Daisy Award in Nursing Education in 2022. His roles transcend several areas of nursing, including leadership, education, mentorship, innovation, research, community relations and development, and direct patient care in the acute care setting. His passion for research and innovation has led to various improvements in operational efficiency, policy revisions, educational system developments, and positive patient outcomes. He continues to volunteer time to the nursing community through educational lectures and clinical precepting for graduates pursuing bachelor's and master's degrees. Bethany Johnson, BSN, RN, OCN, is a nurse educator at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, (PRMCE) in Everett, Washington. Ms Johnson has worked for more than 15 years as a nurse in Medical Oncology at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett. This year, she transitioned into the role of nurse educator. She works on a system level, developing and teaching new hire education, and on a hospital level as a hands-on resource. As a nurse leader, she has served on and chaired several committees within the institution. She is pursuing advanced education and has obtained her certification in oncology. She has published on quality improvement, presented a poster, and participated on an expert panel. The poster presentation at the Providence Saint Joseph Hospital (PSJH) research conference received the Most Innovative Clinical Award.
Publikováno v:
Journal of infusion nursing : the official publication of the Infusion Nurses Society [J Infus Nurs] 2024 Nov-Dec 01; Vol. 47 (6), pp. 397-407. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Oct 30.
Autor:
Bissmeyer H; Author Affiliations: Providence Swedish, North Division Education & Professional Practice Team, Cherry Hill Campus, James Tower, Seattle, Washington (Ms Bissmeyer); Providence Swedish, North Division Education & Professional Practice Team, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington (Dr Gallegos); Providence Swedish, First Hill and Cherry Hill, Surgical Services, Seattle, Washington (Dr Randazzo); Staffing, Transfer, and Operations Center (STOC), Providence Swedish, Seattle, Washington (Ms Scheffler); Providence Swedish, Real Estate Strategy & Operations (RESO), Planning & Design Team, Providence Swedish First Hill, Seattle, Washington (Ms Sullivan Lee); and Staffing, Transfer, and Operations Center (STOC), Providence Swedish, Seattle, Washington (Ms Powell)., Gallegos C, Randazzo S, Scheffler C, Sullivan Lee L, Powell L
Publikováno v:
Nursing administration quarterly [Nurs Adm Q] 2025 Jan-Mar 01; Vol. 49 (1), pp. E1-E7. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Dec 03.
Autor:
Zarella O; Colorado Integrated Food Safety Center of Excellence, Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora, Colorado (Mss Zarella and White, Mr Elson, and Dr Scallan Walter); Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Denver, Colorado (Ms Hewitson); Washington Integrated Food Safety Center of Excellence, University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, Washington (Ms Ramsey and Dr Basemen); and Washington State Department of Health, Tumwater, Washington (Ms Melius)., White AE, Ramsey E, Elson G, Melius B, Hewitson I, Baseman J, Walter ES
Publikováno v:
Journal of public health management and practice : JPHMP [J Public Health Manag Pract] 2024 Sep-Oct 01; Vol. 30 (5), pp. 667-673. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 22.
Autor:
Morris AL; Neonatal Nurse Practitioner, Neonatal Associate Chief, Advanced Practice Services, Neonatology Regional Program, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington (Ms Morris); and Neonatal Nurse Practitioner, Neonatal Advanced Practice Professional Development Lead, Neonatology Regional Program, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington (Ms Bosque)., Bosque EM
Publikováno v:
Advances in neonatal care : official journal of the National Association of Neonatal Nurses [Adv Neonatal Care] 2024 Aug 01; Vol. 24 (4), pp. 354-363. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 08.
Autor:
Bays AM; Medicine Department, University of Washington, MS 359860, 325 9th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104, USA. Electronic address: alisonmb@uw.edu.
Publikováno v:
Neuroimaging clinics of North America [Neuroimaging Clin N Am] 2024 Feb; Vol. 34 (1), pp. 23-29. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Aug 21.
Autor:
Wuellner S; Safety and Health Assessment and Research for Prevention (SHARP) Program, Washington State Department of Labor & Industries, Olympia, Washington (Dr Wuellner); and Office of Communicable Disease Epidemiology, Washington State Department of Health, Olympia, Washington (Ms Levenson)., Levenson C
Publikováno v:
Journal of public health management and practice : JPHMP [J Public Health Manag Pract] 2024 Jan-Feb 01; Vol. 30 (1), pp. 36-45. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Oct 13.
Autor:
Bartles R; Providence, Maple Valley, Washington.; Rebecca (Becca) Bartles, DrPH, MPH, CIC, FAPIC, is the executive director of infectious disease management and prevention for Providence. Dr Bartles has practiced infection prevention for the last 17 years in a variety of health care settings and has numerous publications focused on infection prevention staffing and endoscope safety. She received both her BS in Public Health, Health Education, and her MPH in Epidemiology from East Tennessee State University. She completed her Doctorate in Public Health in 2021 with a dissertation topic of 'Assessing Efficacy of an Evidence-Based Clostridioides difficile Screening Tool Using Electronic Medical Record Data.' Dr Bartles also teaches courses at the University of Providence for a Masters in Infection Prevention degree program that she founded in 2016. She has been CIC certified since 2008 and is an Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology fellow. Most notably, though, Dr Bartles is the mother of 4 beautiful daughters, ages 8 to 23.; Andria Moore, MN, RN, CPHQ, CCRN-K, is a senior program manager for nursing practice and quality at Providence Health System. She completed her nursing degree at Georgetown University and her Master's in Nursing from the University of Washington. She holds credentials in both critical care nursing and health care quality. She has over a decade of experience in various health care settings. Currently she works in close partnership with interdisciplinary teams across Providence to drive system-wide quality and practice strategic initiatives. Her work focuses on reduction of nurse sensitive quality indicators, optimizing nursing workflows, and leading practice change to ensure alignment with the latest evidence-based care standards.; Rosemary Martin, ASCP (M)CM, CLSSBB, CIC, is the system infection prevention program manager for the Providence Health System, a 54-hospital system across 7 states. She has 20 years of experience as a careered clinical microbiologist and process improvement consultant; her projects currently focus on developing a process improvement program for system infection prevention and creating dashboards for the enterprise that aggregates various data at the system, regional, and local level. She provides support to the system team as a subject matter expert in leveraging technological platforms for governance and team management. She holds a degree in microbiology from the University of Washington, is certified as an Infection Preventionist (CIC), Clinical Microbiologist ASCP(M)CM, and Lean Six Sigma Black Belt (CLSSBB).; Rebecca (Bex) Clarkson, RN, MSN, CIC, is a senior infection preventionist with Providence Health System. She is a registered nurse by background and has practiced since 2009 in multiple settings across the hospital, including emergency medicine, cardiac, oncology, acute observation, and charge nurse. Her nonacute experience includes work in home infusion, business consultation, envenomation and animal educational presentations, curriculum development, and filming set compliance officer. Ms Clarkson received her MSN with an emphasis in nursing education with an intent to teach nursing school when she fell into infection prevention in 2015 and realized that this is where she belongs. Her publications and national presentations revolve around topics related to central line-associated bloodstream infection and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention, displaying her passion and dedication to patient safety.; Laura Ebinger, CIC, is a system infection preventionist for Providence Health. Laura has practiced infection prevention and epidemiology for the last 17 years in several health care settings. She received her BS in psychology through the University of Washington. Ms Ebinger worked as an instructional designer for 4 years for a private university creating online modules for master-level programs. She also has her own infection prevention consulting business, which provides consultative expertise to health care facilities and businesses. She has been CIC-certified since 2007. Ms Ebinger has a passion for incorporating the latest technology with infection prevention practices, creating practical and efficient work processes., Moore A; Providence, Maple Valley, Washington.; Rebecca (Becca) Bartles, DrPH, MPH, CIC, FAPIC, is the executive director of infectious disease management and prevention for Providence. Dr Bartles has practiced infection prevention for the last 17 years in a variety of health care settings and has numerous publications focused on infection prevention staffing and endoscope safety. She received both her BS in Public Health, Health Education, and her MPH in Epidemiology from East Tennessee State University. She completed her Doctorate in Public Health in 2021 with a dissertation topic of 'Assessing Efficacy of an Evidence-Based Clostridioides difficile Screening Tool Using Electronic Medical Record Data.' Dr Bartles also teaches courses at the University of Providence for a Masters in Infection Prevention degree program that she founded in 2016. She has been CIC certified since 2008 and is an Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology fellow. Most notably, though, Dr Bartles is the mother of 4 beautiful daughters, ages 8 to 23.; Andria Moore, MN, RN, CPHQ, CCRN-K, is a senior program manager for nursing practice and quality at Providence Health System. She completed her nursing degree at Georgetown University and her Master's in Nursing from the University of Washington. She holds credentials in both critical care nursing and health care quality. She has over a decade of experience in various health care settings. Currently she works in close partnership with interdisciplinary teams across Providence to drive system-wide quality and practice strategic initiatives. Her work focuses on reduction of nurse sensitive quality indicators, optimizing nursing workflows, and leading practice change to ensure alignment with the latest evidence-based care standards.; Rosemary Martin, ASCP (M)CM, CLSSBB, CIC, is the system infection prevention program manager for the Providence Health System, a 54-hospital system across 7 states. She has 20 years of experience as a careered clinical microbiologist and process improvement consultant; her projects currently focus on developing a process improvement program for system infection prevention and creating dashboards for the enterprise that aggregates various data at the system, regional, and local level. She provides support to the system team as a subject matter expert in leveraging technological platforms for governance and team management. She holds a degree in microbiology from the University of Washington, is certified as an Infection Preventionist (CIC), Clinical Microbiologist ASCP(M)CM, and Lean Six Sigma Black Belt (CLSSBB).; Rebecca (Bex) Clarkson, RN, MSN, CIC, is a senior infection preventionist with Providence Health System. She is a registered nurse by background and has practiced since 2009 in multiple settings across the hospital, including emergency medicine, cardiac, oncology, acute observation, and charge nurse. Her nonacute experience includes work in home infusion, business consultation, envenomation and animal educational presentations, curriculum development, and filming set compliance officer. Ms Clarkson received her MSN with an emphasis in nursing education with an intent to teach nursing school when she fell into infection prevention in 2015 and realized that this is where she belongs. Her publications and national presentations revolve around topics related to central line-associated bloodstream infection and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention, displaying her passion and dedication to patient safety.; Laura Ebinger, CIC, is a system infection preventionist for Providence Health. Laura has practiced infection prevention and epidemiology for the last 17 years in several health care settings. She received her BS in psychology through the University of Washington. Ms Ebinger worked as an instructional designer for 4 years for a private university creating online modules for master-level programs. She also has her own infection prevention consulting business, which provides consultative expertise to health care facilities and businesses. She has been CIC-certified since 2007. Ms Ebinger has a passion for incorporating the latest technology with infection prevention practices, creating practical and efficient work processes., Martin R; Providence, Maple Valley, Washington.; Rebecca (Becca) Bartles, DrPH, MPH, CIC, FAPIC, is the executive director of infectious disease management and prevention for Providence. Dr Bartles has practiced infection prevention for the last 17 years in a variety of health care settings and has numerous publications focused on infection prevention staffing and endoscope safety. She received both her BS in Public Health, Health Education, and her MPH in Epidemiology from East Tennessee State University. She completed her Doctorate in Public Health in 2021 with a dissertation topic of 'Assessing Efficacy of an Evidence-Based Clostridioides difficile Screening Tool Using Electronic Medical Record Data.' Dr Bartles also teaches courses at the University of Providence for a Masters in Infection Prevention degree program that she founded in 2016. She has been CIC certified since 2008 and is an Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology fellow. Most notably, though, Dr Bartles is the mother of 4 beautiful daughters, ages 8 to 23.; Andria Moore, MN, RN, CPHQ, CCRN-K, is a senior program manager for nursing practice and quality at Providence Health System. She completed her nursing degree at Georgetown University and her Master's in Nursing from the University of Washington. She holds credentials in both critical care nursing and health care quality. She has over a decade of experience in various health care settings. Currently she works in close partnership with interdisciplinary teams across Providence to drive system-wide quality and practice strategic initiatives. Her work focuses on reduction of nurse sensitive quality indicators, optimizing nursing workflows, and leading practice change to ensure alignment with the latest evidence-based care standards.; Rosemary Martin, ASCP (M)CM, CLSSBB, CIC, is the system infection prevention program manager for the Providence Health System, a 54-hospital system across 7 states. She has 20 years of experience as a careered clinical microbiologist and process improvement consultant; her projects currently focus on developing a process improvement program for system infection prevention and creating dashboards for the enterprise that aggregates various data at the system, regional, and local level. She provides support to the system team as a subject matter expert in leveraging technological platforms for governance and team management. She holds a degree in microbiology from the University of Washington, is certified as an Infection Preventionist (CIC), Clinical Microbiologist ASCP(M)CM, and Lean Six Sigma Black Belt (CLSSBB).; Rebecca (Bex) Clarkson, RN, MSN, CIC, is a senior infection preventionist with Providence Health System. She is a registered nurse by background and has practiced since 2009 in multiple settings across the hospital, including emergency medicine, cardiac, oncology, acute observation, and charge nurse. Her nonacute experience includes work in home infusion, business consultation, envenomation and animal educational presentations, curriculum development, and filming set compliance officer. Ms Clarkson received her MSN with an emphasis in nursing education with an intent to teach nursing school when she fell into infection prevention in 2015 and realized that this is where she belongs. Her publications and national presentations revolve around topics related to central line-associated bloodstream infection and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention, displaying her passion and dedication to patient safety.; Laura Ebinger, CIC, is a system infection preventionist for Providence Health. Laura has practiced infection prevention and epidemiology for the last 17 years in several health care settings. She received her BS in psychology through the University of Washington. Ms Ebinger worked as an instructional designer for 4 years for a private university creating online modules for master-level programs. She also has her own infection prevention consulting business, which provides consultative expertise to health care facilities and businesses. She has been CIC-certified since 2007. Ms Ebinger has a passion for incorporating the latest technology with infection prevention practices, creating practical and efficient work processes., Clarkson R; Providence, Maple Valley, Washington.; Rebecca (Becca) Bartles, DrPH, MPH, CIC, FAPIC, is the executive director of infectious disease management and prevention for Providence. Dr Bartles has practiced infection prevention for the last 17 years in a variety of health care settings and has numerous publications focused on infection prevention staffing and endoscope safety. She received both her BS in Public Health, Health Education, and her MPH in Epidemiology from East Tennessee State University. She completed her Doctorate in Public Health in 2021 with a dissertation topic of 'Assessing Efficacy of an Evidence-Based Clostridioides difficile Screening Tool Using Electronic Medical Record Data.' Dr Bartles also teaches courses at the University of Providence for a Masters in Infection Prevention degree program that she founded in 2016. She has been CIC certified since 2008 and is an Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology fellow. Most notably, though, Dr Bartles is the mother of 4 beautiful daughters, ages 8 to 23.; Andria Moore, MN, RN, CPHQ, CCRN-K, is a senior program manager for nursing practice and quality at Providence Health System. She completed her nursing degree at Georgetown University and her Master's in Nursing from the University of Washington. She holds credentials in both critical care nursing and health care quality. She has over a decade of experience in various health care settings. Currently she works in close partnership with interdisciplinary teams across Providence to drive system-wide quality and practice strategic initiatives. Her work focuses on reduction of nurse sensitive quality indicators, optimizing nursing workflows, and leading practice change to ensure alignment with the latest evidence-based care standards.; Rosemary Martin, ASCP (M)CM, CLSSBB, CIC, is the system infection prevention program manager for the Providence Health System, a 54-hospital system across 7 states. She has 20 years of experience as a careered clinical microbiologist and process improvement consultant; her projects currently focus on developing a process improvement program for system infection prevention and creating dashboards for the enterprise that aggregates various data at the system, regional, and local level. She provides support to the system team as a subject matter expert in leveraging technological platforms for governance and team management. She holds a degree in microbiology from the University of Washington, is certified as an Infection Preventionist (CIC), Clinical Microbiologist ASCP(M)CM, and Lean Six Sigma Black Belt (CLSSBB).; Rebecca (Bex) Clarkson, RN, MSN, CIC, is a senior infection preventionist with Providence Health System. She is a registered nurse by background and has practiced since 2009 in multiple settings across the hospital, including emergency medicine, cardiac, oncology, acute observation, and charge nurse. Her nonacute experience includes work in home infusion, business consultation, envenomation and animal educational presentations, curriculum development, and filming set compliance officer. Ms Clarkson received her MSN with an emphasis in nursing education with an intent to teach nursing school when she fell into infection prevention in 2015 and realized that this is where she belongs. Her publications and national presentations revolve around topics related to central line-associated bloodstream infection and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention, displaying her passion and dedication to patient safety.; Laura Ebinger, CIC, is a system infection preventionist for Providence Health. Laura has practiced infection prevention and epidemiology for the last 17 years in several health care settings. She received her BS in psychology through the University of Washington. Ms Ebinger worked as an instructional designer for 4 years for a private university creating online modules for master-level programs. She also has her own infection prevention consulting business, which provides consultative expertise to health care facilities and businesses. She has been CIC-certified since 2007. Ms Ebinger has a passion for incorporating the latest technology with infection prevention practices, creating practical and efficient work processes., Ebinger L; Providence, Maple Valley, Washington.; Rebecca (Becca) Bartles, DrPH, MPH, CIC, FAPIC, is the executive director of infectious disease management and prevention for Providence. Dr Bartles has practiced infection prevention for the last 17 years in a variety of health care settings and has numerous publications focused on infection prevention staffing and endoscope safety. She received both her BS in Public Health, Health Education, and her MPH in Epidemiology from East Tennessee State University. She completed her Doctorate in Public Health in 2021 with a dissertation topic of 'Assessing Efficacy of an Evidence-Based Clostridioides difficile Screening Tool Using Electronic Medical Record Data.' Dr Bartles also teaches courses at the University of Providence for a Masters in Infection Prevention degree program that she founded in 2016. She has been CIC certified since 2008 and is an Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology fellow. Most notably, though, Dr Bartles is the mother of 4 beautiful daughters, ages 8 to 23.; Andria Moore, MN, RN, CPHQ, CCRN-K, is a senior program manager for nursing practice and quality at Providence Health System. She completed her nursing degree at Georgetown University and her Master's in Nursing from the University of Washington. She holds credentials in both critical care nursing and health care quality. She has over a decade of experience in various health care settings. Currently she works in close partnership with interdisciplinary teams across Providence to drive system-wide quality and practice strategic initiatives. Her work focuses on reduction of nurse sensitive quality indicators, optimizing nursing workflows, and leading practice change to ensure alignment with the latest evidence-based care standards.; Rosemary Martin, ASCP (M)CM, CLSSBB, CIC, is the system infection prevention program manager for the Providence Health System, a 54-hospital system across 7 states. She has 20 years of experience as a careered clinical microbiologist and process improvement consultant; her projects currently focus on developing a process improvement program for system infection prevention and creating dashboards for the enterprise that aggregates various data at the system, regional, and local level. She provides support to the system team as a subject matter expert in leveraging technological platforms for governance and team management. She holds a degree in microbiology from the University of Washington, is certified as an Infection Preventionist (CIC), Clinical Microbiologist ASCP(M)CM, and Lean Six Sigma Black Belt (CLSSBB).; Rebecca (Bex) Clarkson, RN, MSN, CIC, is a senior infection preventionist with Providence Health System. She is a registered nurse by background and has practiced since 2009 in multiple settings across the hospital, including emergency medicine, cardiac, oncology, acute observation, and charge nurse. Her nonacute experience includes work in home infusion, business consultation, envenomation and animal educational presentations, curriculum development, and filming set compliance officer. Ms Clarkson received her MSN with an emphasis in nursing education with an intent to teach nursing school when she fell into infection prevention in 2015 and realized that this is where she belongs. Her publications and national presentations revolve around topics related to central line-associated bloodstream infection and catheter-associated urinary tract infection prevention, displaying her passion and dedication to patient safety.; Laura Ebinger, CIC, is a system infection preventionist for Providence Health. Laura has practiced infection prevention and epidemiology for the last 17 years in several health care settings. She received her BS in psychology through the University of Washington. Ms Ebinger worked as an instructional designer for 4 years for a private university creating online modules for master-level programs. She also has her own infection prevention consulting business, which provides consultative expertise to health care facilities and businesses. She has been CIC-certified since 2007. Ms Ebinger has a passion for incorporating the latest technology with infection prevention practices, creating practical and efficient work processes.
Publikováno v:
Journal of infusion nursing : the official publication of the Infusion Nurses Society [J Infus Nurs] 2023 Sep-Oct 01; Vol. 46 (5), pp. 266-271.