July 11, 2024
Kimberly Powell, an assistant professor in the University of Missouri Sinclair School of Nursing, was honored at the Clinical Informatics Conference in Minneapolis for her contributions to health informatics and gerontology as a Fellow of the American Medical Informatics Association.
The American Medical Informatics Association is a community committed to the vision of a world where informatics transforms people’s care. Over the last 35 years, the use of informatics has grown exponentially to improve health and to make better health care decisions. Today, informatics is key to accelerating the current goals of health care reform.
Powell’s research includes areas of health information technology and gerontology. Her scholarly work focuses broadly on health data sharing with providers, patients and family caregivers using technologies such as patient portals, text messaging applications, health information exchange and telehealth.
In 2022, as the principal investigator, Powell and her interdisciplinary team were awarded a three-year, $1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Aging to show how nursing home staff can securely use HIPAA-compliant text messages to speed up decision-making and allow residents to be safely cared for in the nursing home without the need for a costly and traumatic transfer to the hospital.
Powell was also recently announced as a Betty Irene Moore Fellow for Nurse Leaders and Innovators at UC Davis. The competitive fellowship program selects early-to-mid-career nursing scholars and innovators and provides $450,000 in funding over three years for an innovative project or study plus $50,000 for their home institution.
During the three-year program, fellows remain at their home institutions, participate in an online learning community, then gather annually at UC Davis for a week-long convocation.
Read more from the Sinclair School of Nursing