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Welcome to the 
pana blog

Updated: May 26, 2022

👏 👏 👏 Thanks to all the Geisinger Health System / Bloomsburg University of Pa. Nurse Anesthesia CRNAs and SRNAs who turned out in Sunbury on April 20 and Shamokin on April 22 as part of a community service project with the United Way to help vaccinate rural Pa. residents. One of our SRNAs was able to vaccinate her sister, who was 2016 graduate of the nurse anesthesia program. Check out the photos and be sure to watch the clip from Eyewitness News WBRE WYOU.

VIDEO:



 

To the Times:

Surgery and anesthesia can be intimidating. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs) are advanced practice nurses who specialize in anesthesia and are required to be experienced critical care nurses. CRNAs provide continuous care during anesthesia. We’re usually the last people patients see before a procedure begins and the first to greet them when they awaken. Frequently, anesthesia includes amnesic agents and often, our patients do not remember us or even realize they were cared for by a nurse anesthetist.


During this pandemic, many CRNAs served as front line health-care workers, fulfilling critical roles inside and outside the operating room. CRNAs were uniquely able to utilize their specialized skill set, which includes critical care experience, to care for critically ill patients suffering from this respiratory pandemic in intensive care units or operating rooms.


CRNAs are recognized only as registered nurses, not nurse anesthetists, in Pennsylvania, despite their advanced education and training because there is no definition for nurse anesthetists under Pennsylvania’s Professional Nursing Law. Pennsylvania remains one of only two states that fail to formally recognize CRNAs. This roadblock forces Pennsylvania CRNAs to obtain credentials from other states to provide mission, volunteer, and military work.


Pennsylvania legislators should act to provide CRNAs with the title recognition they need and have earned.


Jodie Szlachta CRNA, Ph.D, Program Director, Crozer-Chester Medical Center / Villanova University Nurse Anesthesia Program


Source: DelcoTimes

 

Pennsylvania’s certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs) possess unique skillsets that have made our professionals critical to the state’s response to the health-care crisis caused by COVID-19. So many of you have worked long and hard to meet the growing demands of this pandemic.


Because of your commitment to patient health, many of you want to do even more.


CRNAs have been reaching out to the Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists (PANA) to examine ways our profession may be able to help the state implement and potentially expand its vaccination program by offering to support clinics or providing volunteers. With our high level of education and training, CRNAs are perfectly suited for the task at hand.


PANA has had discussions with the commonwealth during this critical juncture to offer our services and make sure they know about our willingness to take on a bigger role.


Unfortunately, at this early stage of the vaccine rollout and based on available supplies, the first phases of the program are locked in place. We will continue to work with the state on future opportunities as vaccinations progress in the weeks and months ahead.


If you want to make sure the state knows you are available to help, the Department of Health is encouraging individuals to register on Pennsylvania’s online registry for medical and non-medical volunteers: https://www.serv.pa.gov/.


If you want to stay on top of the work PANA is doing to offer its assistant, and any future opportunities that may arise from our work with the state, please visit https://www.pana.org/page/vaccineprovidercommitment.


Please note that these are two separate databases, and by signing up via the PANA site you are not adding yourself to a pool of volunteers. More information will be shared at a later date when it becomes available.


All of us at PANA are so proud of the work being done by CRNAs and SRNAs around the state, and we are so grateful that so many of you reached out to the association about your ideas on ways to help with the vaccination program. We have the same shared goals and will do all we can to help you so you can fulfill your mission to help others.

 

Copyright © 2026 Pennsylvania Association of Nurse Anesthetists

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