
Compassionate patient care drives Reid Health’s inaugural Advanced Practice Provider of the Year winner
Sept. 25, 2025 -- Perseverance and determination have carried Deanna Medley, NP, through personal challenges and tragedy to a career focused on compassionate, patient-centered care.
As
a nocturnist hospitalist for Reid Hospitalist Group, she ensures
patient-focused care continues seamlessly through the night.
Colleagues
describe her as driven, respectful of others, and committed to excellence. As
an advocate, mentor, and collaborative teammate, she answers questions clearly,
provides expert clinical judgment, and is regarded for her diagnostic skill.
With both bedside skill and empathy, she doesn't just treat illness — she brings comfort to the whole person.

Medley
was selected as Reid Health's first recipient of the Advanced Practice Provider
(APP) of the Year Award for her commitment to clinical quality, compassion
toward patients and families, support for colleagues, and efforts to improve
programs and services that enhance the health and quality of life within Reid's
service area.
Her
selection was announced Thursday night at a celebration dinner to recognize APPs
for their contributions. Nominations were solicited from patients, physicians,
and healthcare workers.
Ben
Wells, Reid Health President/CEO, said choosing from the nominees was difficult,
but Medley's inspiring perseverance and high level of collaboration and
compassion stood out.
"With
the work Deanna does and the way she does it, she serves as an example and
inspiration to others, especially our patients who trust us in their most
vulnerable moments," Wells said.
"She
demonstrates professionalism, compassion, and competence that help patients feel
comfortable the care they receive at Reid is appropriate, best-in-class, and
they'll be well taken care of."
The
award was established to shine a light on the exceptional contributions APPs
make across the health system. The annual honor will recognize APPs who
consistently live out the mission of Reid, demonstrate excellence in practice,
and serve as role models for their peers. Any APP nominated must be a full-time
member of Reid's medical staff.
A
native of Eaton, Ohio, Medley had an early interest in becoming a nurse. While
a Girl Scout, she created an art piece answering the question, "What do you
want to be when you grow up?" Her
response was a nurse, spelling the word with an e instead of a u. Years later,
she found the artwork at her grandmother's home where she grew up.
Medley's
path to nursing was anything but simple.
"I
have a very complicated life," she said. "I had my first son at 13 years old.
Leslie and I are actually both millennials."
As
she watched the labor and delivery nurses that cared for her, nursing was a career
she knew she would love.
Just
a few years later, tragedy changed Medley's life. Her mother helped to take
care of her son while Medley was at school. One day while driving home from
daycare, her mother - who had epilepsy - suffered a seizure, causing her to collide
with a semi.
"She
died at just 38 years old. I was 16, and my son was 3. He was in the car with
her and experienced a traumatic brain injury," Medley said.
"My
life was never the same. I was very motivated to make sure I had a career for
me and my kids."

She
worked hard to overcome obstacles as a young mother pursuing a nursing degree -
and faced more complications from a serious car accident of her own six months
later. Yet, she was determined to persevere.
"I
was always very motivated," Medley said. "I was going to be a nurse."
Medley
balanced motherhood with academics, earning her associate degree in nursing
from Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio. She waited until her third son, her youngest, started kindergarten to earn her bachelor's degree and later
a master's from the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Her
career began at Miami Valley Hospital and then at Bethesda North Hospital in
Cincinnati. She gained nursing experience in maternity, intensive, and acute
care, before advancing to nurse practitioner and later a hospitalist.
In
September 2021, Medley joined Reid as a nocturnist hospitalist on the night shift.
Stacia
Robertson, RN, Director of CDI & Inpatient Physician Services, said Medley
brought a sense of community to the team and continues to be a leader.
"She's
just the person you want on your team," Robertson said. "She cares about her
patients. She cares about her co-workers, and she tries to do the right thing
for whoever is involved. She practices compassionate medicine and makes sure
she puts the patient first."
Robertson
said Medley also contributes solutions, including developing a buprenorphine
order set to treat substance misuse.
Cherie
Frame, NP, Reid Hospitalist Group, said it's Medley's warmth and sincerity that
gives her the ability to connect with others around her.
"Deanna
is magnetic," Frame said. "She always has a story to tell, and she just pulls
people in."
Medley
and Frame serve on Reid's Advanced Practice Committee.
"Deanna possesses a rare quality that she becomes very engaged in whatever she does. She's excellent at the patient's bedside in any kind of critical situation. She just brings calm to the storm." -- Cherie Frame, NP, Reid Hospitalist Group
Justin
Varghese, MD, Hospitalist Medical Director & Section Chief, Reid
Hospitalist Group, said nights can get hectic for the team.
"She's
the one when it gets extremely busy, that's somebody you want along your side,"
he said. "She's very much team-oriented."
"There
are times where it's super busy and I'll tell Deanna, 'Hey, the ER isn't
stopping with admissions.' Her response is always, 'You just give me whatever
you need and we'll get through the night.' That positive attitude she brings
always helps the team."

It
was Medley's husband, Mike, who encouraged her to join the hospitalist staff
during the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, she was working inpatient
pulmonology for Bethesda North while he was the core lab manager at Reid. The sense
of hospitality and a feeling of being valued as a provider convinced her to
join Reid.
Medley
also serves the community through The Nest and Reid Health PACE.
The
Nest is a maternal treatment center serving as an outpatient rehabilitation
program before and after childbirth for women with drug and alcohol dependency
issues, located at LifeSpring Church in Richmond.
Medley
provides postpartum care for the program, created by Reid Health and Meridian
Health Services in 2021.
She
gained experience caring for mothers with substance misuse as a nursing student
on the maternity unit at Miami Valley. At first, she struggled with caring for them without judgment,
but an early experience and her faith helped to change her perspective. She now
views her role as keeping mothers safe and giving their babies the best chance
at life.
Taylor
Thompson, Nurse Navigator for The Nest, said Medley focuses on the whole
person.
"She
has a good attitude about everything she puts her mind to, and she really cares
for the patients she encounters," Thompson said.
Reid
Health PACE serves seniors age 55 and older with personalized care plans to
help them live independently. Between PACE and The Nest, she serves the
community about three days a week, plus every third weekend she's the provider on-call
for PACE.
It's
a way for her to alleviate the burden for medical staff where she can, Medley
said.
Family
is at the center of her life and career. Growing up in her grandparents' home, she
learned to serve her community and to work hard.
Outside
of work, she enjoys time with her family, including two grandsons and her
grandmother. She likes to travel, often to Atlanta, Georgia, where her husband now
works.
"He's
my rock. Mr. Medley keeps me sane and he keeps me grounded," she said.
She's
humbled to be recognized among colleagues she feels are just as deserving.
"I
feel like so many of us just kind of work in the shadows, and we're OK with
that. We're OK just taking care of the patients," Medley said. "It's a terrific
honor to be chosen."
Her
experiences have shaped who she is, giving her a deeper connection to her
patients, their families, and her team members.
"I don't want people to have to endure the pain of loss like I did, if I can help it," Medley said. "If we can't prevent it, then I want to give them time to process. It really makes me more empathetic to patients. We work hard to take care of people."