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Penn Nursing scholar calls for greater recognition of nurses' "dual expertise"

07.08.26 | University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing
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PHILADELPHIA (July 8, 2026) – In a new letter published in The Lancet , Penn Nursing ’s Kathryn Connell, PhD, RN, CCRN , argues that nursing is a profession where "dual expertise" is widespread yet structurally invisible. Dr. Connell calls for urgent systemic reforms to support nurse clinician–scientists who balance active bedside practice, research, and personal lived experience.

Connell, who is an Assistant Professor in Penn Nursing’s Department of Biobehavioral Health Sciences ; Core Faculty at the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research; Affiliated Faculty at the Palliative and Advanced Illness Research Center; Senior Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics; and Clinical Nurse 2 at Pennsylvania Hospital ,highlights that while many nurses are driven to the profession by personal encounters with illness or health-system failures, they are traditionally viewed strictly as caregivers rather than knowledge producers. Furthermore, unlike physician–scientists who benefit from established infrastructure, formal hybrid roles for nurses remain rare. To maintain both worlds, nurse clinician–scientists often resort to working clinical shifts on nights and weekends alongside full-time academic appointments.

Translating Bedside Realities into Research

Losing this dual presence, Connell argues, stifles health care innovation. Nurse clinician–scientists are uniquely positioned to translate data into real-world care. She notes that her own research on ICU "co-patient illness severity"—how one critical patient's stability impacts outcomes for another in a nurse's assignment—originated directly from a challenging moment at a patient's bedside. "That clinical experience became a research question that no amount of secondary data analysis alone would have surfaced," Connell writes. To unlock this potential, Connell calls to:

By building this infrastructure, Connell notes, the health care system can finally value the crucial insights nurses generate at the intersection of practice, research, and personal understanding.

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About the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Penn Nursing) is a global leader in nursing education, research, and practice, and is ranked the #1 nursing school in the world by QS World University (2026), a distinction it has held nine prior times. Penn Nursing also consistently earns top national rankings from U.S. News & World Report for its BSN and graduate programs and is the top National Institutes of Health (NIH)–funded nursing research institution in the United States. By integrating innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and evidence-based practice, Penn Nursing prepares nurse scientists, clinicians, and leaders to meet the complex health needs of a global society. Follow Penn Nursing: Facebook | LinkedIn | YouTube | Instagram .

The Lancet

10.1016/S0140-6736(26)00912-8

Dual expertise in nursing: extending the case for recognition

4-Jul-2026

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Contact Information

Ed Federico
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing
efed@nursing.upenn.edu

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This article is based on a news release from University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. BrightSurf curates and republishes science news from research institutions worldwide; the original release is linked below.

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APA:
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. (2026, July 8). Penn Nursing scholar calls for greater recognition of nurses' "dual expertise". Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LKNOYKWL/penn-nursing-scholar-calls-for-greater-recognition-of-nurses-dual-expertise.html
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"Penn Nursing scholar calls for greater recognition of nurses' "dual expertise"." Brightsurf News, Jul. 8 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LKNOYKWL/penn-nursing-scholar-calls-for-greater-recognition-of-nurses-dual-expertise.html.