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April Kapu assumes presidency of American Association of Nurse Practitioners

She will begin her two-year term as president of AANP

The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP), the organisation representing the nation’s 325,000 licensed nurse practitioners (NPs), announced that April N Kapu will begin her two-year term as president of AANP on July 1. Kapu takes over from Sophia Thomas, who has served as AANP’s president since 2019 and guided the association through substantial membership growth and legislative successes.

Kapu is a certified acute care NP who holds both a master’s and doctoral degree in nursing from Vanderbilt University School of Nursing. Over the past few years, she has served as an associate chief nursing officer for advanced practice nursing at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) in Nashville, Tennessee. As a nursing executive for the health system, she worked to establish innovative, high-quality, value-driven health care services and provide resources and professional practice support for more than 1,400 advanced practice nurses. She is a professor of clinical nursing and recently was appointed Associate Dean for Community and Clinical Partnerships for Vanderbilt University School of Nursing. Kapu has presented at numerous national conferences, has authored chapters in advanced practice nursing textbooks and has published manuscripts in a wide variety of peer-reviewed nursing, administrative and medical journals.

An AANP Fellow, Kapu served on the AANP Board of Directors as regional director for five years before beginning her term as president-elect. In addition, she is a Fellow for the Society of Critical Care Medicine and a Fellow for the American Academy of Nursing. Kapu is an active member of the Tennessee Nurses Association (TNA), served as chair for the TNA Government Affairs and Advanced Practice Registered Nurse Committees and represented NPs on the Tennessee governor’s special commission focused on pain and addiction treatment education. Kapu has been awarded VUMC’s Transformational Nurse Leader of the Year and Tennessee Hospital Association’s Nurse of Clinical Distinction. 

This Thursday, as Kapu succeeds Thomas and begins her role as president, Thomas will start her one-year term as AANP Immediate Past President.

“Our top priority as NPs is to make sure that every American has adequate access to healthcare,” said Kapu. “Today, more than 80 million Americans live in primary care shortage areas, a number that is far too high. The COVID-19 pandemic has created unprecedented health care challenges and obstacles to health care access and delivery. Therefore, I am pleased and proud to represent the voices of more than 325,000 licensed NPs and the countless patients they serve. I look forward to leading AANP’s efforts to ensure that every patient has access to high-quality health care delivered by the provider of their choice.”

“We are honoured to welcome Dr Kapu as AANP’s new president and look forward to continuing our work together on the critical issues facing patients and NPs,” said Jon Fanning, CEO, AANP. “As NPs continue their efforts to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19 and combat the pandemic, Dr Kapu will lead the association’s efforts to strengthen patient access to high-quality, NP-delivered health care in communities nationwide and to foster the continued growth of the NP role. We also extend our heartfelt thanks to outgoing president, Dr Thomas, who has fearlessly led the profession’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and has been an unwavering champion for the needs of NPs and patients throughout the crisis.”

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