WNA has launched several new Mutual Interest Groups (MIGs). These are spaces where nurses actually do something. If you’ve ever thought: “I wish I could get more involved, but I don’t know where to start.” This is it.
First, what is a MIG?
Mutual Interest Groups are made up of nurses who share a common focus and want to move it forward together. That can mean education, advocacy, peer support, or building resources that didn’t exist before.
Here’s where you can plug in
Nurses Against Human Trafficking
If you want to be part of addressing one of the most urgent and under recognized public health issues, this is your group.
This work focuses on:
• Educating nurses on recognizing and responding to trafficking.
• Building resources nurses can actually use.
• Expanding awareness across Wisconsin.
Nurses are often the first point of contact. This group helps nurses be ready for that moment.
This MIG hits close to home for a lot of people. If you care about burnout, mental health, and making sure nurses can stay in the profession, this is where that work is happening.
This group focuses on:
• Peer connection and real conversations
• Mental health and resilience education
• Building tools and resources that support nurses long-term
This is practical support, built by nurses and for nurses.
Visit the Wisconsin Nurses caring for Nurses tookit.
If you’ve ever looked at what’s happening with climate, environment, or community health and thought, “this is impacting my patients,” you’re right.
This group brings nurses into that conversation.
Focus areas include:
• Environmental and climate impacts on health
• Advocacy and policy engagement
• Education and collaboration with statewide partners
What does “joining” actually look like?
This is not a heavy lift.
You can:
• Contribute ideas
• Help build resources
• Participate in conversations that matter
Join one group or join all three.
Ready to get involved?
Fill out the interest form and choose the group (or groups) that fit you.



