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Penn Nursing Scholar Urges Recognition of Nurses’ Dual Expertise

Penn Nursing Scholar Urges Recognition of Nurses’ Dual Expertise

Nurse Scientists at the Bedside: Bridging Clinical Practice and Research

In a groundbreaking letter recently published in The Lancet, Dr. Kathryn Connell of the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing challenges the traditional view of nursing as merely a caregiving profession. She highlights the critical but often invisible role of nurse clinician–scientists, professionals who uniquely integrate active clinical care, cutting-edge research, and personal experience to advance healthcare outcomes. Despite their dual expertise, these nursing professionals lack formal recognition and institutional support, a gap Dr. Connell argues urgently needs to be addressed.

Unlike physician–scientists who often have established hybrid roles and dedicated infrastructure, nurse clinician–scientists frequently find themselves balancing full-time academic duties with clinical shifts during nights and weekends. This double burden not only strains their capacity but also impedes the translation of valuable bedside insights into systematic scientific inquiry. Dr. Connell’s appeal centers on creating formalized roles that protect time for both research and clinical practice, recognizing that hands-on patient care enriches research questions and outcomes.

The synergy between clinical experience and scholarly inquiry is not merely theoretical. Dr. Connell’s own work on ICU patient assignments illustrates this principle vividly. Her investigation into “co-patient illness severity”—how the condition of one critical patient can directly affect the outcomes of another patient under the same nurse’s care—originated from a moment of acute clinical observation, something secondary data could never have revealed. This research underscores how embedded knowledge from the bedside can inform and transform healthcare systems.

Dr. Connell advocates for structural reform to elevate the nurse clinician–scientist role within academic and healthcare institutions. Key recommendations include the development of integrated clinician–scientist positions with protected research time, revising promotion criteria to value clinical activity as a complement to academic achievements, and fostering environments where nurses can safely leverage their lived experiences without jeopardizing their professional credibility.

These changes have the potential to unleash a new wave of healthcare innovation. Nurses, with their constant patient contact and nuanced understanding of care delivery challenges, stand at a unique crossroads where empirical data meets human experience. Their dual expertise positions them to identify, investigate, and address complex healthcare issues dynamically and impactfully.

The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, home to Dr. Connell, is a global leader in nursing science and education recognized for its NIH-funded research. Penn Nursing’s commitment to integrating research with practice exemplifies the institutional support necessary to cultivate nurse clinician–scientists and maximize their impact on healthcare innovation.

As hospital systems and academic institutions strive toward interdisciplinary collaboration and patient-centered care, recognizing and supporting the hybrid nurse clinician–scientist role could redefine nursing’s contribution to medical science. Dr. Connell’s call to action highlights a vital, yet underappreciated, frontier in healthcare research—one where nurses are not only caregivers but also pioneering investigators transforming patient outcomes from within the clinical environment.

Subject of Research: Nursing clinician–scientist roles and their impact on healthcare innovation
Article Title: Dual expertise in nursing: extending the case for recognition
News Publication Date: July 8, 2026
Web References: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00912-8/fulltext

Tags: bridging bedside care and scientific inquiryclinical practice and research integrationdual roles in nursinghealthcare outcomes improvementICU patient care and researchinstitutional support for nursing researchnurse clinician–scientistsnurse scientist rolesnursing researchphysician–scientist vs. nurse scientist rolesrecognition of nursing expertise