Prata Health

Founder & Lead Nurse

Bianca Fabbo, RN: Founder of Prata Health

Bianca Fabbo, RN, MSN-ed, AMB-BC, is the President and Founder of Prata Health and the registered nurse who personally leads each client's care. She is the concierge nurse founder Scottsdale families turn to when the healthcare system has become too much to manage alone: a clinician who learns the whole picture, sits in on the appointments, coordinates the specialists, and stays. She did not build Prata Health to run an agency. She built it to be the nurse she kept wishing her own patients' families had.

That conviction came from years inside the system, watching capable, loving families get lost in handoffs, conflicting instructions, and care that felt mediocre when it should have felt human. Bianca founded Prata Health to deliver something different on purpose: skilled clinical care at home, given with love and compassion, by a nurse who becomes part of the family for years rather than a single shift.

Why Bianca Fabbo, RN, founded Prata Health

Bianca spent years as a registered nurse before she ever thought about starting a company. What she saw in that time is what eventually pushed her to build one. She watched families who were doing everything right still fall through the cracks: a discharge with eight new prescriptions and no one to reconcile them, a specialist's instructions that contradicted the last specialist's, an aging parent sent home to recover with a stack of paperwork and no nurse to make sense of it. The care was technically delivered. It rarely felt like care.

The gap she kept seeing was not a shortage of good clinicians. It was the absence of one nurse who owned the whole picture. Care in the United States is fragmented across providers who often do not communicate with one another, and that fragmentation is a recognized source of avoidable harm. Bianca built Prata Health to close that gap for one family at a time: put a registered nurse on the client's team, keep her there, and let her lead.

  • Founded Prata Health to replace fragmented, task-based care with one nurse who leads the whole plan.
  • Built the model around the gap she saw firsthand: families lost between providers who never talk to each other.
  • Care is meant to feel loving and personal, never mediocre, the standard she sets for every client.
  • The promise is continuity: the same registered nurse, for as long as your family needs her.

Credentials and clinical background

Bianca's credentials are the foundation of the care Prata Health delivers, and they are worth reading plainly rather than skimming as letters after a name. She holds an MSN-ed, a master's-level education in nursing. She is a licensed Registered Nurse (RN). And she carries the AMB-BC, board certification in ambulatory care nursing through the American Nurses Credentialing Center, the certifying body of the American Nurses Association. Ambulatory care is the discipline of coordinating care for people living with complex and chronic conditions outside the hospital, which is precisely the work a concierge nurse does in the home.

Those three credentials map directly to what a family actually gets. Master's-level preparation means she reads a complicated case the way a senior clinician does. RN licensure means she can deliver real skilled nursing, not companionship dressed up as care. And the ambulatory board certification means coordinating a fragmented care plan is not a side skill for her, it is the thing she trained and tested specifically to do well.

  • MSN-ed: a master's-level education in nursing.
  • RN: licensed Registered Nurse, qualified to deliver skilled clinical care in the home.
  • AMB-BC: board certification in ambulatory care nursing through the American Nurses Credentialing Center.
  • Ambulatory care nursing is the discipline of coordinating care for people with complex, chronic, and post-acute needs.

Her philosophy: skilled care delivered with love and compassion

Ask Bianca what makes Prata Health different and she does not start with a service list. She starts with a standard: care given with love and compassion, never mediocre. In practice that means she does the unglamorous, high-value work most models skip. She learns your medications by heart. She knows which cardiologist prefers what, and which medication caused the rash last spring. She translates what the specialist actually said after you leave the office. She catches the small change in an aging parent before it becomes an emergency room visit.

This is not warmth instead of clinical rigor. It is warmth because of it. Keeping one nurse with a family is a deliberate clinical choice, not a nicety: research links continuity of care with the same clinician to lower mortality and better adherence to treatment. Bianca's philosophy is simply that the most compassionate care and the most effective care are, more often than not, the same thing, and that both require a nurse who stays long enough to truly know you.

  • Care delivered with love and compassion is the standard, not the marketing.
  • One nurse who knows your full history, medications, providers, and preferences firsthand.
  • Continuity is treated as a clinical decision, not a comfort detail.
  • Becomes part of the family over years, the person you call first when something changes.

How Bianca leads care as a concierge nurse founder in Scottsdale

As the concierge nurse founder Scottsdale families work with directly, Bianca does not supervise care from a distance the way an agency nurse signs off on a caseload. She leads it. When a new client comes to Prata Health, she builds the picture first: the diagnoses, the full medication list, the physicians, the goals, and the realities of the home. From there she directs the skilled care and pulls in the right specialist at the right moment, a pharmacist for a medication review before a hospital discharge, a dietitian to rebuild strength after surgery, a nurse educator so the family feels confident overnight.

The skilled work she leads is real nursing: wound care, medication management, basic IV therapy, chronic condition monitoring for conditions like CHF, COPD, and diabetes, post-surgical recovery, and compassionate end-of-life support at home. Just as important is the navigation, attending appointments, coordinating specialists, and making sure nothing falls through the cracks. For families who would rather recover at home than enter a facility, that combination of skilled care and coordination is often what makes staying home both safe and possible.

  • Leads each client's plan personally, then coordinates the wider clinical team around it.
  • Delivers skilled care: wound care, medication management, basic IV therapy, chronic condition monitoring.
  • Supports post-surgical recovery and dignified end-of-life care at home.
  • Handles the navigation: appointment attendance, specialist coordination, and family advocacy.
  • Keeps Prata Health boutique on purpose, so one nurse can truly know each family.

The author and authority behind Prata Health's guidance

Bianca Fabbo is the clinical authority behind the guidance published on this site. The resources on concierge nursing, post-surgery recovery, aging in place, and chronic condition management reflect her standards and are reviewed against reputable medical sources rather than written as generic health filler. When you read advice here on caring for an aging parent or recovering at home after surgery, it carries the perspective of a master's-prepared, board-certified registered nurse who does this work in real homes every week.

That author entity matters for two reasons. For families, it means the information is accountable to a named, credentialed clinician, not anonymous. For Prata Health, it is the same principle that runs through the care: a real nurse, with real credentials, who stands behind what she says. If you are weighing concierge nursing for someone you love, the most useful next step is a conversation with the nurse who would lead the care.

  • Bianca Fabbo, RN, MSN-ed, AMB-BC is the named clinical author and reviewer behind Prata Health's guidance.
  • Content is grounded in reputable medical sources, never thin or generic health writing.
  • The same nurse who writes the guidance is the one who leads the care.
  • Ready to talk? Request a consultation with the nurse who would lead your family's care.

Questions, answered

Frequently asked

Sources

  1. Pereira Gray DJ, Sidaway-Lee K, White E, Thorne A, Evans PH. Continuity of care with doctors: a matter of life and death? A systematic review of continuity of care and mortality. BMJ Open, 2018. link
  2. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), Care Coordination. link
  3. American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), Ambulatory Care Nursing Certification. link

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