National Infusion Center Association (NICA)
Kaitey Morgan currently serves as the Chief Clinical Officer at the National Infusion Center Association (NICA), a role held since 2019, where the organization focuses on advancing the trade of provider-administered medications in non-hospital care settings. In addition to this position, Kaitey has been the Director of Quality and Standards and a Board Member for the Infusion Access Foundation since October 2020, contributing to advocacy efforts for patients needing provider-administered medications. Previous experience includes the role of Director of Clinical Operations at OI Infusion and Project Manager for the Infusion Service Line at ConvenientMD Urgent Care. Kaitey began nursing career as a Staff RN at Eastern Maine Medical Center, specializing in inpatient oncology, and has held various nursing positions since 2008. Educational background includes a Bachelor's degree in Nursing Science from the University of Maine and an ongoing Master's degree in Business Administration with a focus on Healthcare Administration from Rivier University.
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National Infusion Center Association (NICA)
National Infusion Center (NICA) is a nonprofit trade association and the nation’s voice for non-hospital, community-based infusion providers that offer a safe, more affordable, and more cost-effective alternative to hospital care settings for provider-administered medications. NICA's efforts are focused on delivery channel sustainability and expansion, buy-and-bill protection, maintaining net positive reimbursement, improving treatment adherence, and promoting patient safety and care quality. We support policies that improve drug affordability for beneficiaries, increase price transparency, reduce disparities in quality of care and safety across care settings, and enable care delivery in the highest-quality, lowest-cost care setting. Our goal is to help decision makers understand the value of receiving provider-administered medications in non-hospital care settings and ensure that the community-based infusion center remains a safe, more efficient, and more cost-effective alternative to hospital care settings.