Nursing Organization
CNA defines “nursing organization” as a not-for-profit group of health professionals with a formal governance structure. The organization serves and is accountable to its specialist nurse members and others by providing continuing professional development (CPD), health care, and/or research.
Examples of nursing organizations:
- Faculties of nursing
- Health authorities and/or hospital departments or divisions
- Nursing societies
- Nursing associations
- Nursing academies
- Canadian provincial/territorial nursing regulatory authorities
Note that our definition excludes for-profit organizations and ventures, government agencies and disease-specific advocacy groups.
Examples of non-nursing organizations:
- Pharmaceutical companies and their advisory groups
- Medical and surgical supply companies
- Medical device companies
- Communication companies
- Disease-oriented patient advocacy organizations (e.g., Diabetes Canada)
- Government departments or agencies (e.g., Health Canada, Public Health Agency of Canada)
- Medical education or communications companies (e.g., CME Group)
- For-profit online educators, publishing companies or simulation companies
- Small groups of nurses working together to develop educational programming