American Association of Nurse Practitioners

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American Association of Nurse Practitioners
AbbreviationAANP
FormationJanuary 1, 2013
TypeProfessional organization
Legal status501(c)(6)
PurposeMembership, Educational, Advocacy
HeadquartersAustin, Texas
Region served
United States
Membership
100,000
President
Stephen Ferrara
Immediate Past President
April Kapu
CEO
Jon Fanning
Websitewww.aanp.org

The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) is a North American professional association formed in 2013 as a result of a merger between the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners (founded in 1985) and the American College of Nurse Practitioners (founded in 1995) to provide nurse practitioners with a unified way to network and advocate their issues.[1] The American Academy of Nurse Practitioners was the first organization created for nurse practitioners of all specialties in the United States of America, and AANP remains the largest national membership organization for nurse practitioners in the United States. AANP seeks to represent the interests of the more than 355,000 nurse practitioners licensed to practice in the U.S.[2] and continually advocates at local, state and federal levels for the recognition of nurse practitioners as providers of high-quality, cost-effective and personalized health care.

The association has two official journals: the Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners and The Journal for Nurse Practitioners.

Criticism

The AANP's position paper Quality of Nurse Practitioner Practice[3] has been strongly criticised for misrepresenting the available data.[4][unbalanced opinion?]

Notable events

  • 2013 - The American College of Nurse Practitioners and American Academy of Nurse Practitioners merge to form the American Association of Nurse Practitioners.
  • 2020 - AANP calls on members to use social media channels to block a news story which is negative towards nurse practitioners.[5]
  • 2020 - AANP states a book relating to nurse practitioners is propagating negative "conspiracy theories and misstatements".[6]

References

  1. ^ "About NPs and AANP". American Association of Nurse Practitioners.
  2. ^ "NP Fact Sheet". American Association of Nurse Practitioners. June 2022.
  3. ^ "Quality of Nurse Practitioner Practice". American Association of Nurse Practitioners. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
  4. ^ Admin, P. P. P. (2020-01-15). "Does Science Support NP Independence?". Physicians for Patient Protection. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
  5. ^ "Dear AANP Member".
  6. ^ Practitioners, American Association of Nurse. "AANP Statement on WGN's Biased News Story on Nurse Practitioner Profession". www.prnewswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 2022-06-07.

External links