![]() |
|
Wallace Community College Receives $1.9 Million Grant for Nursing ProgramsWallace Community College received a $1.9 million grant to improve services in its various levels of nursing programs. According to executives at Flowers Hospital and Southeast Alabama Medical Center, the College's healthcare programs produce the majority of the region's nurses and provide an avenue for existing healthcare employees to pursue advanced degrees. Wallace Community College was awarded a $1.9 million grant from the U.S. Department of Labor to establish the Tri-state Rural Access in Nursing (T.R.A.I.N.) program, which will address critical needs in the local healthcare industry. According to project director Kathy Buntin, WCC coordinator of health sciences, T.R.A.I.N. will provide a certified nursing assistant program curriculum for entry-level healthcare workers, a healthcare retention support lab to improve student retention and a school-at-work program. Funds will also allow for the renovation of existing nursing laboratories and will be used to increase recruiting efforts in local high schools and communities. "Nine counties in the Wallace service area are currently designated nurse shortage counties, and regional healthcare facilities report a shortage in virtually every medical profession," said Buntin. "T.R.A.I.N. targets the critical shortage in the local workforce with training activities to address current and future needs." Local hospitals, including Flowers Hospital and Southeast Alabama Medical Center in Dothan, Wiregrass Medical Center in Geneva, and Lakeview Community Hospital in Eufaula, have partnered with the T.R.A.I.N. project by providing on-site classroom facilities, tuition reimbursement incentives and scholarships. Likewise, Dale County High School, Eufaula High School and Dothan Area Career Center have provided partnership agreements. The high schools will provide recruiting opportunities and access to facilities, while the career center will provide preliminary testing and referral services. According to Keith Granger, president and CEO of Flowers Hospital in Dothan, the majority of healthcare workers in the region are Wallace graduates. "Flowers Hospital relies on Wallace Community College as the largest supplier of our licensed practical nurses and associate degree registered nurses," he said. "Additionally, Wallace provides an avenue for our employees as they continue to pursue additional education in an effort to obtain advanced degrees." Ron Owen, CEO of Southeast Alabama Medical Center, agrees. "The healthcare community and Southeast Alabama Medical Center are very fortunate to have Wallace Community College educating our future workforce," he said. "A majority of the Medical Center's nursing staff, both Registered Nurses and Licensed Practical Nurses, received their degrees from Wallace. Without the excellent programs in nursing and other healthcare professions at Wallace, our recruitment efforts would be very difficult." According to Buntin, 1462 students are currently enrolled in the College's healthcare training programs. "Our goal is to increase the availability of services for healthcare students so we can meet the workforce demands in our local communities," she said. Wallace serves more than 443,000 residents of 15 rural counties in southeast Alabama, southwest Georgia and the Florida panhandle. The Department of Labor reported Wallace was one of only 70 of 388 grant applications funded nationwide. More Males Entering UA Nursing Overall Enrollment Doubles Since 2000TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Record numbers of students continue enrolling in The University of Alabama Capstone College of Nursing, and, increasingly, these students are male. The UA nursing college’s overall enrollment was 884 students in fall 2004, a 99 percent increase from the 445 students enrolled in fall 2000 and the highest enrollment in the College’s 29-year history. In the same span, the number of men enrolled in the program has grown 154 percent, from 41 men to 104. While UA women nursing students still outnumber men more than 7 to 1, the gap is shrinking. In 2000, it was closer to 10 to 1. Historically, UA, and the state as a whole, has drawn a higher than average percentage of males to nursing, said Dr. Sara Barger, dean of the Capstone College of Nursing, but results of the severe national nursing shortage are attracting bundles of students, including an increasingly large number of men. “It’s an economic thing,” Barger said. “As the shortage gets worse, salaries go up. As salaries go up, more people, including men, want to take advantage of that.” Four of the 20 high school students registering for the recent Capstone Summer Nursing Academy were males, according to Pat McCullar, coordinator of nursing student recruitment at UA. Men are frequently drawn to the nurse anesthetist career track, Barger said. “More than 50 percent of the males who come here in nursing are absolutely certain they wish to be nurse anesthetists,” she said. The specialty requires a master’s degree after the bachelor’s in nursing, and starting salaries are frequently in the $100,000 range. The College does not specifically target men in student recruitment, but Barger said the College strives to present itself as a non-gender specific career option. Men are well represented among the College’s student ambassadors, who assist in student recruitment, and prospective students increasingly see male nurse role models when they look at health care delivery. “They’ve got to see somebody who looks like them, who is successful, who they want to emulate,” Barger said. According to the Alabama Board of Nursing, the number of male nurses licensed in Alabama has grown from 3,697, during fiscal year 1999, to 5,072 in fiscal year 2005. These figures include both Registered Nurses and Licensed Practical Nurses. Dr. Mitch Shelton, an assistant professor in the Capstone College of Nursing and assistant director for information technology in UA’s Institute for Rural Health Research, said men are more accepted in the nursing profession than when he began his career in the early 1980s. “The attitudes have changed about male nurses,” Shelton said. “When I was in nursing school I was banned from doing clinicals at one hospital's labor and delivery room because I was a male. The funny thing about it was the patient, or the patient's family, did not have a problem with me. It was the charge nurse that would not allow it. I even had a nursing instructor suggest that males should not be a part of ‘our profession’.” Additional qualified male and female nurses would bring welcome relief to the health care industry. More than 70 percent of hospital CEOs indicated their facilities had nursing shortages, according to an October 2004 report from The American College of Healthcare Executives. More new jobs are expected to be created for registered nurses, through 2012, than for any other profession, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. The shortage was created by multiple issues, including the aging baby boomer population and nurses retiring at faster rates than people were entering the profession, Barger said. “We had 20 years where very few people were going into nursing,” Barger said. “We went from 25 percent of our nurses being under the age of 30 to 9 percent.” Solving the issue isn’t as simple as finding qualified students to declare nursing as their major. Last semester at UA, for example, there were 64 available slots for student promotion into the professional portion of the nursing curriculum. The slots are limited, in part, because state law requires properly certified faculty members to supervise no more than eight students during the students’ clinical rotations at health care facilities. The limited slots, and the growing interest in them, create a competitive environment, Barger said. UA is seeking to fill three additional nursing faculty positions and will promote 88 students into the professional curriculum in the fall. “As bad as the nursing shortage is, the nursing faculty shortage is worse,” Barger said. As the demand for nurses grows and more students choose nursing as a major, competition increases among students, male and female, for the available slots. The latest group promoted had had the highest GPA ever, well over a 3.0. Information courtesy of the University of Alabama. |
University of South Alabama - College of Nursing GrantHealth care for the elderly in Alabama, Florida and Georgia will soon improve following a $432,540 grant that established the Live Oak Geriatric Education Center, a collaborative effort involving the University of South Alabama College of Nursing, Florida State University and Florida A&M University. Funded by the Health Resources and Services Administration, the geriatric education center consortium provides training in geriatrics for health care providers in professions such as medicine, nursing, pharmacy, rehabilitation therapies and social work. Older patients are the most frequent users of health care services, medications, nursing home stays and hospitalizations, yet health care providers of all types have received inadequate training. Each of the three states involved in the new geriatric education center has fewer geriatricians per capita that the national average. And like the rest of the nation, the region faces severe shortages of nurse practitioners, pharmacists, social workers and other allied health professionals with special training in geriatrics. "Older adults are the fastest growing segment of the population in the United States, but there is a shortage of health care providers that focus primarily on this age group," said Dr. Lynn Chilton, project director for USA's participation in the center and professor and coordinator of the gerontological nurse practitioner program at USA's College of Nursing. According to Chilton, health care for elderly patients can differ substantially from other adult care. Physiological changes that occur when an individual ages can affect immunity, drug absorption and the presentation of illness, among other things. "Signs and symptoms for certain conditions are different in some cases than they are for younger adults," Chilton explained. "For instance, very rarely do elderly people present with crushing chest pains when they're having a heart attack, so health care providers need to be aware of the more subtle signs and symptoms in an older person." The Live Oak Geriatric Education Center is one of 35 centers in the nation, but it is the only one to focus on training health care providers who serve the elderly in underserved rural and urban areas in three states. Training will take place in southern Alabama, the Florida Panhandle and southern Georgia. Two immediate goals of the center consortium are to assess the geriatric education needs of multidisciplinary health care providers in the rural areas of Alabama and to make continuing education for these professionals more accessible. Access to continuing education has historically been a problem for health care professionals in rural areas because of the distances they must travel to attend classes and meetings. The geriatric education consortium will use technology, in part, to help close the gap by hosting online training programs and videoconferencing. Read more about the University of South Alabama College of Nursing. Connecticut Nursing Schools
|
| Updated February 2008 © Copyright 2005-2008 Alabama-Nursing-Schools.com |