(Photo by Peter Julian)

Monica O'Reilly-Jacob named an American Academy of Nursing Fellow

Connell School of Nursing Assistant Professor Monica O鈥橰eilly-Jacob will be inducted into the American Academy of Nursing, an organization of the field's most accomplished leaders in policy, research, administration, practice, and academia. The Academy is dedicated to improving health and achieving health equity by impacting policy through nursing leadership, innovation, and science.

A nursing health services researcher, O鈥橰eilly-Jacob provides evidence to support policy changes that maximize the capacity of the nurse practitioner (NP) workforce to meet the demand for primary care in underserved areas. During COVID-19, she was the first to examine the effects of temporary full practice authority on NPs, indicating that organizations had a greater impact on NP autonomy than did state policy. Her earlier work demonstrates that NPs effectively utilize healthcare resources and are ideally suited for inclusion in value-based payment models. With more than $1.1 million in research sponsorship, she leads a multi-disciplinary team developing a critical mass of NP-owned practices with the capacity to thrive in value-based care models. O鈥橰eilly-Jacob鈥檚 work has been published in nursing and interdisciplinary journals, and she serves on national and state advisory councils, including the American Association of Colleges of Nursing Health Policy Advisory Council.

O鈥橰eilly-Jacob and the other inductees will be recognized at AAN's annual health policy conference taking place in Washington, D.C. in October.聽聽

鈥淚t gives me great pride to welcome these incredible leaders into our organization during our 50th anniversary year,鈥 said AAN President Kenneth R. White. 鈥淭his year鈥檚 group of inductees truly represents today鈥檚 thought leaders and the diversity of our profession鈥檚 policy leaders, practitioners, educators, and innovators. Each聽Fellow聽of the Academy is changing the future of health and health care through their support to advance equity, promote inclusion, and lift up the next generation of nurses, advancing the Academy鈥檚 vision of healthy lives for all people.鈥