National Nurse Practitioner Week, taking place Nov. 9 through 15, 2025, is an opportunity to honor the vital role nurse practitioners play in improving health and well-being in communities everywhere. Today, there are 431,000 licensed NPs nationwide, and each year, NPs conduct nearly 1 billion patient visits, providing high-quality health services in hospitals, clinics, private practices, urgent care centers, and long-term care facilities.
Frontier Nursing University, a pioneer in graduate nursing education, has more than 11,000 graduates across the United States. Frontier offered the first family nurse practitioner specialty program in 1970, and today our graduates specialize in family care, psychiatric-mental health care, women’s health care, and midwifery care. We graduate more than 700 nurse practitioners each year.
To mark National Nurse Practitioner Week, FNU is offering three new continuing education (CE) sessions, each available at no cost and eligible for CE credit through FNU. Two live sessions will be offered, in addition to an on-demand session. To learn more about each session and to register, click here.
The first live session will take place Wednesday, Nov. 12 at noon ET. Entitled “The Modern Menopause Conversation: Evidence-Based Practice for our Patients – and Ourselves,” the session will be conducted by Kristin Gianelis, DNP, APRN, WHNP-BC, ANP-BC, MSCP, PMH-C, CNE, who is a graduate and Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) faculty member at FNU. The session is sponsored by the FNU Alumni Association.
Through the session, participants will be able to evaluate common and uncommon symptoms, evidence-based clinical management, and challenges in the treatment of women during menopause. Dr. Gianelis will discuss pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment modalities for menopause and explore considerations of special populations and menopause challenges for the clinician.
That same day, an additional live session will take place, entitled “The Essential Self-Care Toolkit for Leaders.” Set for 7 p.m. ET, the session will give participants the tools to define self-care; describe self-resiliency; list two to three self-care activities that align with their personal passions, priorities, and preferences; and construct a weekly calendar that incorporates at least one daily self-care activity. The session will be conducted by Kimberly Adams Tufts, ND, WHNP-BC, FADLN, FAAN, who is a DNP Project Faculty member at FNU. The session is sponsored by the IHI Open School Chapter.
In addition, a pre-recorded, on-demand CE session will be available starting Monday, Nov. 10. The session, entitled “Pediatric Mental Health Conditions in Primary Care: Early Recognition and Collaborative Management,” will provide participants with the tools to apply concepts of early recognition, intervention, and collaborative management in pediatric mental health conditions using a case study. The session will include six presenters, who will discuss a range of topics from the impact of mental health conditions in the child and adolescent populations, to barriers to care and recommendations for meeting the needs of pediatric and adolescent mental health.
We look forward to celebrating National Nurse Practitioner Week with you. Visit frontier.edu/npweek to join us!





