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HARRISBURG, Pa., Jan. 20, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs) are usually the last person a patient sees before a surgical procedure begins, and the first person they awake to when it ends. As the hands-on providers of anesthesia, CRNAs are with their patients throughout the entire medical procedure.


Jan. 19-25 marks "National CRNA Week," celebrating the nearly 74,000 nurse anesthetists and residents in nurse anesthesiology programs across the country. CRNAs play a critical role in addressing rising health-care costs, protecting patient health, and ensuring access to quality care.


"As members of one of America's most trusted health-care professions, CRNAs have served on the front lines of patient care for more than 150 years, and we continue to answer the call to keep our patients healthy and safe," said Debra Minzola, Ph.D., CRNA, president of the Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists (PANA), which represents approximately 4,000 CRNAs and students statewide.


CRNAs operate safely in every setting where anesthesia is administered, including hospital operating and delivery rooms; ambulatory surgical centers; the offices of dentists, podiatrists, ophthalmologists, and plastic surgeons; pain management centers and more.


From collaborating on transformative health-care policy wins that advance patient care to saving lives by safely administering more than 58 million anesthetics when and where patients need it most each year, the unique expertise of CRNAs helps to ensure communities stay healthy and safe.


With a history that spans to the Civil War, CRNAs have been the main providers of anesthesia care to U.S. military personnel since World War I and remain the primary anesthesia providers in austere combat theaters. CRNAs also remain the primary providers of anesthesia care in rural America and medically underserved areas


Education and training are rigorous. Pennsylvania is among the top draws nationally for CRNA students, with 15 highly rated nurse anesthetist programs spread across the commonwealth. The average nurse anesthetist completes 9,000 clinical hours prior to becoming a CRNA. Because of this experience, numerous medical studies show there is no statistical difference in patient outcomes when a nurse anesthetist provides treatment, even for rare and difficult procedures.


PANA remains active in Pennsylvania to grow and strengthen the profession. Among its priorities: a scope of practice bill that would allow CRNAs to practice to the fullest extent of their education and training, and legislation that would classify nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, and CRNAs as "advanced practice registered nurses," or APRNs. Both measures received broad bipartisan support last session, with plans for reintroduction in the 2025-26 legislative session.


The association also is guarding against measures that would allow a new category of unlicensed anesthesia providers to practice in Pennsylvania. The proposed use of anesthesiologist assistants (AAs) is unproven in terms of anesthesia care and creates major liability issues for hospitals and other practitioners. And, because AAs cannot practice apart from anesthesiologists who supervise them, it is the most expensive anesthesia care delivery models.


The Department of Health currently is reviewing the potential implementation of an AA model through delegatory authority rather than statute.


"We will always be there for our patients during their most vulnerable moments," Minzola said. "And we will do all we can to ensure access to safe, effective, efficient, affordable, compassionate care."


CONTACT: Kurt Knaus

P: 717-724-2866



As if it couldn’t get any better … PANA and Sarah weren’t the only ones to take home awards at AANA’s Annual Congress in San Diego. Other national award winners included:


🏆 Clinical Instructor of the Year:

Rachel A. Wolfe, DNP, CRNA, CCRN, CPN 

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) Hamot School of Anesthesia 


  • Hear from Rachel below or read AANA's release on the award HERE. 












More Photos of Rachel:


 

🏆 Janice Drake CRNA Humanitarian Award:



Dr. Bimpe “Bebe” Adenusi, PhD, CRNA, APRN, CNE, FAANA, FNAP 

Program Director, Cedar Crest College Nurse Anesthesia Program 

 

  • Read AANA’s release about Bebe’s award HERE. 


 

 

🏆Fellows of The AANA Induction Ceremony: 



Dr. Angelarosa DiDonato, DNP, CRNA 

Associated Program Director, University of Pennsylvania 

 

  • Read AANA’s program about fellows featuring Angela HERE. 


 

Dr. John O’Donnell, DrPH, CRNA, FAANA, FSSH   Professor & Founding Chair, Department of Nurse Anesthesia at the University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing 

🏆 John F. Garde Researcher of the Year: 

Dr. John O’Donnell, DrPH, CRNA, FAANA, FSSH 

Professor & Founding Chair, Department of Nurse Anesthesia at the University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing 

 

  • Read AANA’s release about John’s award HERE. 






 

Once again, congratulations to PANA and all its winning members for representing our profession so well and for bringing home these awards to Pennsylvania! We are so proud of all of you!!! We cannot wait until #AANA2025!

Congratulations, PANA & Sarah!

Association & CRNA Sarah Trau Take Home National Awards at Annual Congress

 

The 2023-24 AANA Communications Committee announced that both the Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists (PANA) and Sarah Trau, MS, CRNA, won national awards for their public relations and communications work over the last year.

 

PANA won the award for Best Promotional Effort for National CRNA Week and Sarah won for Best Public Relations Effort by an Individual for all her work to ramp up communications among the association! (Learn more about these awards on AANA’s website HERE.)


Sarah Trau, MS, CRNA
Pictured: Sarah Trau, MS, CRNA

We are so proud of Sarah, who chairs PANA’s Communications Committee, and the whole crew for bringing home these individual and team awards, which were handed out Aug. 3 during AANA’s Awards and Recognition Luncheon at Annual Congress in San Diego.

 

Both PANA and Sarah’s efforts impressed the committee, which recognized their overall contributions to the positive image of the nurse anesthesiology profession.

 

During National CRNA Week in Pa. on Jan. 21-27, PANA ran a multi-faceted campaign that featured a variety of organic social media posts, paid digital ads, and traditional media spots to reach members and the public on the platforms where they get their information.

 

Among the first-of-its-kind projects for PANA, the association officially launched its TikTok account, spearheaded by Sarah and featuring videos of CRNAs talking about their profession and wishing members a happy CRNA Week. Be sure to check out the page: https://www.tiktok.com/@panacrna!

 

Overall, the campaign was a huge success, with engagement rates ranking above baselines for similar advocacy and awareness campaigns, meaning people not only saw the messages, but they engaged and shared them widely.


With its formal launch during CRNA Week, PANA’s TikTok account received more than 1,900 video views among 1,400 unique viewers. The campaign resulted in 65 profile views, 96 likes and 27 shares. Under Sarah’s leadership, the platform continues to grow in popularity and will remain a critical tool going forward with member engagement.

 

If you missed anything during CRNA Week, or just want to relive some of the news, especially after these national team and individual awards, please visit the campaign website: https://www.panaforqualitycare.com/2024-crna-week.


 

GALLERY:



 

Related:

  • CRNAs from Pa. Take Home Awards During AANA Annual Congress 


Copyright © 2025 Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists

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