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4/28/2025
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When:
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April 28, 2025 12:00pm-1:00pm ET
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Where:
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Zoom United States
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Contact:
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info@nacns.org
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Online registration is closed.
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« Go to Upcoming Event List
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Ethical Use of Artificial Intelligence in Academia and CNS Practice
Description: This presentation will provide valuable insights for CNS professionals seeking to navigate the ethical complexities of AI and ensure its responsible and beneficial integration into clinical and academic practice. Objectives:
- Identify ethical concerns related to AI in academic and clinical practice
- Discuss strategies to mitigate these ethical challenges
- Delineate the CNS role in addressing ethical use of AI in academia and nursing/CNS practice
 | Jennifer Manning, DNS, ACNS-BC, CNE
Dr. Manning is a Board-Certified Adult Health Clinical Nurse Specialist. She completed her Bachelors, Masters, and Doctoral Degrees at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center School of Nursing (LSUHSC SON). Dr. Manning began her nursing career as a critical care registered nurse and currently serves as the Associate Dean for Undergraduate Nursing Programs at LSUHSC SON. Her teaching responsibilities include educating in both the DNP and Ph.D. programs at LSUHSC SON. Dr. Manning serves as the nurse researcher at East Jefferson General Hospital. She is a board member for both the National Association for Clinical Nurse Specialists (NACNS) and the Louisiana State Board of Nursing (LSBN).
|  | Phyllis Whitehead, PhD, APRN/CNS, ACHPN, PMGT-BC, FNAP, FCNS, FAAN Dr. Phyllis Whitehead is a clinical ethicist and clinical nurse specialist with the Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital (CRMH) Palliative Care Service and Associate Professor at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. She initiated the Palliative Medicine and Moral Distress Consult Services at CRMH. She is certified in pain management and as an advanced practice hospice and palliative care nurse. Dr. Whitehead has done numerous presentations on pain and symptom management, opioid induced sedation, moral distress, and patients’ end of life preferences locally, regionally, nationally and internationally. Her research interests include moral distress and improving communication with seriously ill patients and has been funded for numerous grants for her research. She was a Board of Director member of the National Association of Clinical Nurse Specialist and is now President-Elect of the National Association of Clinical Nurse Specialists and President of the Virginia Foundation of Nurses. She was a member of the ANA Moral Resilience Advisory Committee. She is a founding member and Board of Director member of the Virginia Association of Clinical Nurse Specialists. She was selected for Governor Ralph Northam’s Policy Council on Opioid and Substance Abuse this year. In 2020 she was elected as a Distinguished Practitioner Fellow in the National Academy of Practice in Nursing. She is a graduate of Radford University where she earned her BSN and MSN and earned her doctorate degree at Virginia Tech. |
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