
Will be honored in June in San Antonio
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (April 28, 2016) â University of Louisville School of Nursing professor Marianne Hutti, Ph.D., A.P.R.N., has received the State Award for Excellence from the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP), the largest professional membership organization for nurse practitioners of all specialties.
The annual award is given to a nurse practitioner in each state who demonstrates excellence in his or her area of practice. Hutti will be honored at an awards ceremony and reception during the AANP 2016 National Conference June 21-26 in San Antonio.
In 1993, Hutti founded the Womenâs Health Nurse Practitioner Program at UofL, the first of its kind in Kentucky. It has transformed into the Womenâs Health-Family Nurse Practitioner Dual Major, and graduates have maintained a 100 percent pass rate on their first attempt of the NCC certification exam since the programâs inception.
Hutti helped develop the womenâs health nurse practitioner scope and standards of practice, which included requiring a masterâs of science in nursing as the entry into practice for womenâs health nurse practitioners, said Whitney Nash, Ph.D., M.S.N., A.N.P.-B.C., UofL School of Nursing associate dean of practice and service.
âDr. Hutti has an extensive record of research that includes more than 30 publications and more presentations than I can count,â said Nash, the Kentucky representative for AANP. âHer most recent and perhaps most significant contribution to womenâs health is her development of the Perinatal Grief Intensity Scale. This instrument aids in predicting those parents at greatest risk for intense grief after perinatal loss.â
Hutti has received national and international recognition for her research on perinatal loss, the death of a fetus or infant soon after birth.
But for Hutti, the vivid memories of helping struggling students excel in nursing school and go on to achieve professional success stand out.
âThere was a group of students I had who just didnât know how to study, and I remember having study sessions over my dining room table with them,â Hutti said. âEvery one of them ended up passing my course and all their subsequent courses. When I look back over my career, those are the things that really make me feel good.â
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