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  • Writer: Lew Bennett, DNP, CRNA
    Lew Bennett, DNP, CRNA
  • Jan 24, 2022


It’s hard to believe, but CRNA Week in Pennsylvania this year is starting to look and feel a lot like CRNA Week last year.


We may not be locked down in 2022 like we were in 2021, but hospitals and health-care facilities once again are facing critical staffing shortages, with some areas setting COVID-19 case records.


Clearly, the pandemic is not finished. The dizzying speed of omicron’s spread has left everyone scratching their heads and questioning what they know about COVID-19.


Through it all, certified registered nurse anesthetists have remained on the frontline, putting their advanced education and training to work to care for critically ill patients.


This year, CRNA Week in Pennsylvania is a tribute to every nurse anesthetist who courageously has stepped forward to serve during this pandemic and who works daily to save lives and provide the best possible care in a variety of settings.


Thank you for all you do to serve our profession so honorably and your patients so faithfully.


All of us are under enormous pressure. To be the most effective we can be, however, we need to ensure we take care of ourselves, so we are able to care for others.


One of my top priorities as PANA president is promoting health and wellness.


Health and wellness have always been important in our profession, but they take on a new meaning during this prolonged pandemic, as health-care providers, including CRNAs and SRNAs, confront a disproportionate share of physical and emotional strain.


Self-care in the workplace and at home is essential. Health and wellness issues span a wide spectrum --- from finding ways to reduce risks and limit stress on the job to making positive choices and managing lifestyles to improve health and fitness.


We are best for others when we are at our own personal best.


PANA values the importance of pillars, which is why you will see more health and wellness activities incorporated into regular meeting, lectures, and spring and fall meetings. Now more than ever, we need to support each other.


I hope CRNA Week in Pennsylvania offers you a time to reflect and celebrate the work we do.


Please share your stories with PANA and your peers, and tag #CRNAinPA on Facebook and Twitter so we can add them to our collections. While you’re at it, visit our new Instagram page, @PANACRNA, which launched this week. Tag us here, too, and show us what you’re doing.


Thank you for stepping forward to serve during this pandemic, for proving yourselves as battle-tested providers on the frontlines at home and in combat, and for fighting to ensure access to safe, cost-effective anesthesia care each and every day.


Lew Bennett, DNP, CRNA

President

Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists

  • Writer: Matt McCoy, DNP, CRNA
    Matt McCoy, DNP, CRNA
  • Jan 25, 2021

Updated: May 26, 2022


It’s safe to say our 2021 National CRNA Week commemoration really is like no other before it. Because of the global pandemic caused by COVID-19, all of us have had to confront personal and professional challenges we never thought we’d have to face.

Even now, more than 10 months after this health-care crisis began, response and recovery efforts continue.

But one thing is certain in these uncertain times: I’ve never been prouder to be a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) than I am today, and I’ve never been more honored to stand by your side as president of the Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists (PANA).

In the most ordinary situations, surgery and anesthesia can be intimidating or frightening. CRNAs provide families comfort and reassurance by never leaving their loved one’s side. When this pandemic separated families in crisis, our promise to be there for every heartbeat, every breath took on a whole new meaning.

Because of our advanced education and hands-on training, CRNAs are uniquely qualified to care for critically ill patients who are suffering because of this respiratory pandemic. Many CRNAs have been serving as frontline health-care workers, fulfilling critical roles inside and outside the operating room during this crisis.

In May, when the state granted a temporary waiver to suspend the CRNA supervision requirement, healthcare facilities jumped at the chance to tap into nurse anesthetists’ unique skillset --- and we rose up to meet the challenge.

By allowing CRNAs to practice to the fullest extent of their education and training, not only are more people familiar with what we do, but our work during this crisis has availed more physicians to provide hands-on care, expanded the capacity of both CRNA and physician providers, and augmented the state’s health-care system to continue to meet the growing demands of this pandemic. Our work affects lives.

This crisis still requires an all-hands-on-deck approach. Our health-care systems are still challenged to function above capacity. As long as response and recovery efforts continue, CRNAs will remain a critical part of the solution as “Experts You Trust. Care You Count On,” our theme this week.

On behalf of PANA, I want to extend my heartfelt gratitude to each and every CRNA and student who has stepped up during these difficult times to represent our profession so honorably and serve patients and families so faithfully. If ever there was a time to commemorate what we do, then 2021 National CRNA Week is the time to do it.

Please be safe. And again, thank you for all you do.

Matt McCoy, DNP, CRNA

President

Pennsylvania Assn of Nurse Anesthetists

Copyright © 2025 Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists

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