Graduate Student Wins Top Honors at Annual Nurse Anesthetists Meeting
Out of 80 competitors, third-year nurse anesthetist graduate student Elizabeth Nickell took first place in a poster presentation at the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA) annual meeting in Boston, Aug. 6-10.
Nickell is a full-time student at the University of Cincinnati and is pursuing her masters of science in nursing (MSN) with a specialty in nurse anesthesia. Her presentation was on Glanzmanns thrombasthenia: a rare, autosomalrecessive disease characterized by an absence of clot retraction with normal platelet count and morphology. The disease creates complications for women giving birth.
"The disease makes the patient more prone to bleeding, which is a particular concern with a patient who is having a baby, says Nickell, who won based on her case study and recommendations for providing anesthesia to these patients.
Nickell says she became interested in advanced practice nursing while working as a nurse in an intensive care unit with certified registered nurse anesthetists.
A certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) is a licensed professional nurse who provides anesthesia services similar to an anesthesiologist. After completing extensive education and training, CRNAs become nationally certified and may then practice in all 50 states.
Nickell co-authored the poster with faculty members, Beth Ann Clayton, who is a CRNA, and Lesley Gilbertson, MD.
Tags
Related Stories
UC experts present research at International Stroke Conference 2026
January 29, 2026
University of Cincinnati researchers are presenting research at the International Stroke Conference 2026 in New Orleans Feb. 4-6.
University of Cincinnati's online programs earn 16 US News rankings
January 27, 2026
The University of Cincinnati's online programs have earned 16 recognitions from U.S. News & World Report.
Hoxworth Blood Center asks snow angels to help replenish blood supply
January 26, 2026
Hoxworth Blood Center, University of Cincinnati, is calling on all eligible blood donors in the Cincinnati area to be our snow angels as we recover from winter weather and closures. Each day, Hoxworth relies on 450 donors to meet the needs at more than 30 local hospitals.