U.S. Representative Cori Bush goes to Washington.
“It’s critical that nurses have a seat at the table when it comes to the policies coming out of Congress. Every single policy needs a nurse’s eye. We talk a lot about the social determinants of health, because it’s all connected . . . nurses see things in a different way.”
As described in this month’s Profiles column, U.S. Representative Cori Bush, RN, arrived in Washington, DC, in January, bringing with her a nurse’s eye and experience as an activist and pastor.
An election representing several firsts.
Her election marked several firsts: she is the first nurse and Black woman Missouri has sent to Congress, and she is also the first woman representative in her district in its almost 200-year history. Bush joins two other nurses in Congress, Representatives Eddie Bernice Johnson of Texas and Lauren Underwood of Illinois.
Representative Bush says she’ll be focused on “doing the very most for everyone in our community, starting with those who have the very least, because that’s what nurses do. We help advance policies that will meet the needs of vulnerable people.”
Read the column, which is free until April 1, to learn more about Bush’s path to nursing and politics and why she thinks more nurses are needed in Congress.
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