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The National League for Nursing (NLN) is a national organization for faculty nurses and leaders in nurse education. It offers faculty development , networking opportunities, testing services, nursing research grants, and public policy initiatives to more than 45,000 individual and 1,000 education and associate members.
Lavinia Lloyd Dock (February 26, 1858 – April 17, 1956) was an American nurse, feminist, writer, pioneer in nursing education and social activist. [1] Dock was an assistant superintendent at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing under Isabel Hampton Robb. She founded what would become the National League for Nursing with Robb and Mary Adelaide Nutting.
National League for Nursing: Former associate director of the National League for Nursing. Helped to form the New York Regents External Degree Program, now known as Excelsior College. 2007 Margaret McClure: Columbia University: New York University: Hospital chief nursing officer.
[16]: 473 From those programs grew the National Center for Nursing Research and the National Institute for Nursing Research. [17]: 10–33 During the 1950s she was a member of the nursing advisory committee of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. [18] During the 1960s, she served as President of the National League for Nursing. [19] [20]
The National Student Nurses' Association (NSNA) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1952 in the United States to mentor nursing students preparing for initial licensure as a Registered Nurse and promote professional development. [1] In 2023, there are over 50,000 members. About 3,000 members attend the annual conference and 700 the mid-year ...
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From February 2007 [7] Malone was appointed chief executive officer of the National League for Nursing (NLN), which has a membership of over 40,000, [1] and she has held this post to the present. She also represented U.S. nurses in the Congress of Nurse Representatives of the International Council of Nurses.
President of the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses (NACGN), 1934–1939 [1] [6] [9] American Nurses Association Board of Directors (ANA's first black elected official), 1948–1952 [1] [6] [10] ANA delegate to the International Council of Nurses, 1949 [3] National League for Nursing Assistant Director, 1959 [1] [3]