01/21/2026
My mom, dad, grandmother, aunt, all are doctors and nurses, and I know it is in my blood to work in healthcare.”
Meet Fionna Norman, who recently graduated with a Master's of Science in Nursing and is continuing her education at UNH through the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program, thanks to a grant from the Advanced Nursing Education Workforce (ANEW) program.
Norman is passionate about psychiatric health because she knows it's where she can make the greatest impact. "According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, there are 91,000 people in New Hampshire who live in a community without access to enough mental health professionals," Norman says. "Through ANEW, I'll be working primarily at federally qualified health centers, providing mental health care. These centers offer integrated healthcare—both primary and mental health—which is crucial for underserved and rural populations."
ANEW's mission of providing grants, mentorship, and training to nurse practitioner students addressing the state's mental health gap aligns perfectly with Norman's passions.
Norman already has extensive clinical experience across New Hampshire hospitals and clinics. She completed her psychiatric rotations and Clinical Nurse Leader research at an inpatient psychiatric hospital, where she developed an educational program on integrative and holistic psychiatric modalities that led to decreased use of restraints and safety emergencies—a project she's now working to publish.
After graduation, Norman plans to continue serving New Hampshire's underserved communities as a Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner while staying involved in advocacy, research, and teaching. Being well-established in the state, she hopes to eventually open her own practice.