DCHS Faculty Member Named Distinguished Fellow, Inaugural Chair of Athletic Training Academy in the National Academies of Practice
03/25/2021
The held its 2021 Virtual Forum on March 18-20 and as part of this 40th anniversary event, welcomed its newest Academy – Athletic Training.
Anthony Breitbach, Ph.D., director of the athletic training program at 鶹Ƶ, was honored as a Distinguished Fellow of the NAP and elected as the inaugural chairperson for the Athletic Training Academy. Breitbach spent two years leading the team that organized and prepared the proposal to include Athletic Training as an academy in the NAP.
Breitbach co-wrote the article with NAP President Jody Frost chronicling the process. The article was published in the March 2021 issue of the Journal of Interprofessional Education and Practice.
Breitbach is excited about the potential impact expanding the NAP to include Athletic Training could have on health care research and education in the future.
“It is such a privilege to help establish an Athletic Training Academy with our peers in the National Academies of Practice,” Breitbach said. “We look forward to collaborating through the NAP to enhance the health of persons and communities through interprofessional education and advocacy.”
Founded in 1981, the NAP is an interprofessional, nonprofit organization, with membership representing 14 health care professions willing to serve as distinguished advisors to health care policy makers in Congress and elsewhere. The 14 academies of practice within the NAP include: Allopathic and Osteopathic Medicine, Athletic Training, Audiology, Dentistry, Nursing, Occupational Therapy, Optometry, Pharmacy, Physical Therapy, Podiatric Medicine, Psychology, Social Work, Speech‐Language Pathology and Veterinary Medicine.
For a profession to be included in the NAP as an academy, a group must submit detail information on how that specific profession: demonstrates evidence of being a collaborative profession; enables professionals to make decisions independently that affect the health and/or well-being of individuals and/or communities; has a code of ethics; has a defined minimum level of professional education; utilizes a recognized accreditation process and maintains high educational standards; uses an established process of licensing, registration or certification to ensure colleagues are qualified and in good standing; and professionally disseminates peer-reviewed scholarly activity.
For an individual to become a Distinguished Fellow of the NAP, individuals must be nominated by a colleague, have their application reviewed by the academy of their profession and then receive a majority vote of the members of the NAP Council. Nominees must be citizens of the United States who have an exemplary career of 10 years or more and are committed to interprofessional practice and accessible, affordable health care for all.
Submitted by Corey Mauer.