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Nursing

The old rules were dumb anyway

The old rules were dumb anyway

Linda Aiken of the School of Nursing spoke said rules that prevent nurses from working in other states without a new license are out of date. “We have the same technology in every state. Patients are the same. They have the same problems. Everybody has babies everywhere,” she said.

Reflections on suffrage: The 19th Amendment at 100
Two women in 1920 standing in fur lined coats and fancy hats, one holds a newspaper called Woman’s Journal and Suffrage News.

Reflections on suffrage: The 19th Amendment at 100

Penn Today reached out to experts from centers and schools across the University to look at suffrage through the lens of history, this election, and the fight yet to come. 

Kristina Linnea García , Kristen de Groot

COVID-19 testing site for Penn students up and running
Two people standing by a table in Houston Hall, one wears PPE and administers a nasal swab to a student.

COVID-19 testing site for Penn students up and running

Easy, quick, and safe testing is just one of several public health measures the University is undertaking to reduce the risk of spreading coronavirus on—and off—campus.

Lauren Hertzler

‘I left the hospital in tears’: Amid the pandemic, new moms aren’t getting the breastfeeding support they need

‘I left the hospital in tears’: Amid the pandemic, new moms aren’t getting the breastfeeding support they need

Diane Spatz of the School of Nursing spoke about the lack of breastfeeding support for first-time moms during the pandemic. “You have a very short window of time to establish lactation,” she said. “Without support to get started a few hours post-delivery, it’s a very quick downward spiral.”

Do COVID-19 patients really have to die alone?

Do COVID-19 patients really have to die alone?

Martha Curley of the School of Nursing spoke about how hospitals can change their visitation policies to allow those dying of COVID-19 to see their family members. “Within a family there may be one or even two people who could understand the significance of being there who could be taught to protect themselves and to go into the room and to be there with the family member,” she said.

Responding to challenges of older adults with COVID-19
Elderly person holds their hands to their face wearing a medical face mask.

Responding to challenges of older adults with COVID-19

Researchers draft a model for transitional care for an aging community transitioning from a hospital back to the community post-COVID.

From Penn Nursing News

The case against separating breastfeeding mothers and infants during the pandemic
Person in a black dress standing on stairs for a portrait.

Diane Spatz is a professor of perinatal nursing and the Helen M. Shearer Professor of Nutrition at the School of Nursing, and a nurse scientist for the lactation program at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. (Image: Eric Sucar)

The case against separating breastfeeding mothers and infants during the pandemic

In a Q&A, Diane Spatz of Penn Nursing and CHOP discusses why it’s safe and beneficial to keep them together, even when the mother tests positive for COVID-19.

Michele W. Berger