Designing the Nurse of the Future - Wright State University...the Nurse of the Future CONH’s...
Transcript of Designing the Nurse of the Future - Wright State University...the Nurse of the Future CONH’s...
WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY– MIAMI VALLEY COLLEGE OF NURSING AND HEALTH
Summer 2014 Volume 2 Issue 1
Designing the Nurse
of the FutureCONH’s redesigned
RN-to-BSN Program seeks to transform nurses
into leaders
nurseadvocatemagazine-June 5-2014.indd 1 6/16/14 9:52 AM
Nursing is
about more
than healing.
It’s about
standing up for
our patients’
needs, being
their voice in
the healthcare
system.
Rosalie o’Dell Mainous Ph.D., aPRn, nnP-BCDean, WRight state univeRsity–MiaMi valley College of nuRsing anD health
Dean of the Wright State University–
Miami Valley College of Nursing and Health
Rosalie O’Dell Mainous
Executive Director of Marketing Services
Denise Robinow
Editor
Bob Mihalek
Art Direction
Stephen Rumbaugh
Design
Theresa Almond
Contributing Writers
Jim Hannah, Bob Mihalek,
Karen Strider-Iiames
Editorial Assistance
Cory MacPherson, Ron Wukeson
Photography
William Jones, Chris Snyder,
Roberta Bowers
Digital Imaging Manipulation
Chris Snyder
The Nurse Advocate is published
two times a year by the
Office of Marketing. Distribution is to Wright
State alumni, faculty, staff, and friends of the
university.
Submit information, comments, and letters to:
The Nurse Advocate editor
Wright State University
4350 Colonel Glenn Hwy.
Beavercreek, OH 45431
Email: [email protected]
nursing.wright.edu
From the Dean’s Desk
C O V E R S T O R Y
2 Designing the Nurses of the FutureThe College of Nursing and Health’s redesigned RN-to-BSN Program seeks to transform nurses into leaders.
F E A T U R E S
4 Masters of DisastersCONH develops National Disaster Health Consortium.
6 Caring for the Most Vulnerable Patients
New Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Program seeks to meet demand, improve healthcare in region.
8 Fast and FuriousCONH alumnus Jon Reichman thrives in the chaos of the ER.
10 40 Years of Excellence in Nursing Education
Over the last 40 years, CONH has played a vital role in improving healthcare in the region, state, and beyond.
12 Portraits of Caring13th annual Cameos of Caring recognizes outstanding nurses.
14 Paving the Way
15 Student Scholarship Recipients
16 New Faces News & Notes
Summer 2014 Volume 2 Issue 1
WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY– MIAMI VALLEY COLLEGE OF NURSING AND HEALTH
Horrible weather in the Miami Valley has come to a conclusion and I am thrilled to see the flowers blooming and the trees leafing out. As we come out of hibernation, much has been accomplished within the college in the last several months. First, we successfully celebrated the 40th anniversary of the college and the 30th anniversary of the Zeta Phi Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau International. From the excellent presentation by Dr. Lorraine Wright, the great lunch provided by Premier Health, the introduction of the new college coin, the outstanding research symposium, a great reception with the introduction of the latest wall of fame alumni inductee Mary Murphy, and the culminating event at the production of Les Misérables, overall it was a fabulous day. Special thanks to Dr. Donna Curry for the display on the history of the college and the hard work of all of the staff, especially Theresa Haghnazarian. We had a great turnout at every event and are looking forward to our 50th anniversary in 2023, which will come sooner than we all think.
We have been hard at work preparing our self-study for our upcoming accreditation visit by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education in November 2014. We will be asking for comments from our communities of interest soon. We are also preparing intensely for the opening of a new interprofessional dedicated education unit, the first in the nation, at Kettering Medical Center. This unit will open January 2, 2015, and will have nursing, medical, and pharmacy students working and learning together in an interprofessional teaching/learning environment. Overseeing this endeavor from Kettering will be newly minted Dr. Melody Campbell, trauma program manager, and her great team.
We recently hosted a reception for Dayton Children’s Hospital celebrating their Magnet status, a wonderful achievement and well deserved. Congratulations to Ms. Renae Phillips, vice president for patient care and chief nurse executive, and her team on this accomplishment. I also want to thank Dr. Syl Trepanier, vice president and system chief nursing officer at Premier Health, for making me a part of the inaugural Nursing Recognition Awards Ceremony at the Schuster Center. The leadership, innovation, and collaborative spirit of the chief nursing officers in this community are second to none.
I hope you enjoy the articles on our new NNP program, the National Health Disaster Consortium, and our RN-to-BSN Program. We are so proud and hope you feel the excitement as well.
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Cover Story
Designing the Nurse of
the FutureCONH’s redesigned
RN-to-BSN Program seeks to transform nurses into leaders
The new RN-to-
BSN Program
is focused on
developing
students’
leadership
skills,
transitioning
a licensed
nurse into the
professional
world and
giving nurses
the tools and
knowledge to
help consumers
navigate
a complex
healthcare
system.
By Bob Mihalek
When the College of Nursing and Health redesigned its RN-to-BSN Program, faculty and administrators wanted to create
a program focused on the future of nursing.To accomplish that goal, they set their sights on
creating a new curriculum that could help mold the nurse of the future.
“There is one word to describe what that person looks like, and it is all around leadership,” said Ann Stalter, Ph.D., associate professor of nursing and the director of the RN-to-BSN Program.
The RN-to-BSN Program is designed for Registered Nurses who have an associate degree or diploma in nursing to complete a BSN that accommodates their typical work schedules. Students may complete the program in as little as 15 months. All courses are held online. An agreement with CONH’s academic partners, including Sinclair Community College, allows students to take their first course at CONH before they are licensed.
“The nurse of tomorrow, in so many ways, is not the nurse of today,” said CONH Dean Rosalie Mainous, Ph.D. “Our RN-to-BSN Program offers an incredible opportunity for practicing nurses, many of whom are experts in their field, to prepare themselves for leadership in the evolving healthcare landscape.”
DEVELOPING LEADERSHIP SKILLSThe new RN-to-BSN Program is focused on developing
students’ leadership skills, transitioning a licensed nurse into the professional world and giving nurses the tools
and knowledge to help consumers navigate a complex healthcare system.
The curriculum includes courses concentrating on leadership, evidence-based practice, public and community health, and holistic health.
“We need nurses who can quickly access information, who can monitor people using state-of-the-art (technology), who can navigate healthcare systems because it’s going to be very, very complex,” Stalter said.
“Whether it is knowledge required based on QSEN, Magnet status, or the Future of Nursing report, graduates from our RN-to-BSN Program will be prepared to shape the healthcare environments in which they work,” Mainous said. “They will be highly desirable in the marketplace as the knowledge, skills, and competencies required in contemporary practice will become ingrained and ready for application.”
Emphasizing leadership in nursing in the curriculum is also vital when you combine a nationwide nursing shortage with looming Baby Boomer retirements. According to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1.2 million new nurses will be needed in the United States by 2020 to replace those who will retire and to meet demands of our aging population.
Students in the newly conceptualized RN-to-BSN Program will learn about advocating for patients’ insurance and Medicaid reimbursements, working with local government agencies that affect public health, examining public policies, and helping improve environmental health.
Stalter describes the program’s approach as “holistic nursing” that includes addressing preventative care and environmental health. People often seek out care when they are in crisis, Stalter said, and “what we want to do is prevent that crisis from ever happening.”
“If we can spend our time and energy improving people’s lives and outcomes, as opposed to finding people in crisis and trying to rehabilitate them to a better life, then it’s a better use of resources overall for everybody,” she said.
The program also addresses problems in the nursing profession, including sleep deprivation, stress, obesity, substance abuse, and mental health. Stalter says it’s important to teach nurses to take better care of themselves.
INTERACTIVE LESSONSCONH began redesigning the program a few years ago
when Wright State University switched from quarters to semesters. As part of that transition, the college started introducing improvements to the program’s curriculum, including placing all courses online and ensuring the program was friendly toward working nurses.
“In that process, we discovered that we could even do a better job of meeting needs of working nurses as well as anticipating the region’s need to meet the healthcare consumer,” Stalter said.
The new iteration of the RN-to-BSN Program includes a complete redesign and upgrade of online courses. Static, PowerPoint-based lectures are being replaced with video and interactive courses that students watch on an attractive, clean-looking website.
“Any way we can find to increase student engagement, increase student learning, those are things we want to do,” said Stephanie Triplett, RN, CCRN, clinical instructor of nursing.
Last semester, Triplett taught Pathophysiology, one of the first upgraded courses. She brought life to her PowerPoint lectures by turning them into video presentations and by creating features that encourage students to engage with the lessons.
“By making the visual component of the course more interesting and more interactive, it should engage the students more” than a traditional passive online course, Triplett said.
Jamie Kuhlman, a student in the RN-to-BSN Program, said the curriculum is pertinent and applicable to current nursing practice and appears to be evolving as nursing practice evolves. “I have already instituted what I have learned thus far in my nursing practice,” said Kuhlman, an RN in Good Samaritan Hospital’s Emergency Department.
She described the course material as clearly research- and evidence-based, with a goal of preparing students for the next step, not only in their careers, but also in their education. “This program already has me looking to the future for my MSN,” she said.
COHN faculty know that adding interactive components to the online courses improves student learning outcomes. Preliminary data from studies by faculty show that students are applying lessons to clinical practice and that student satisfaction is very high, Stalter said.
Best-practice examples and evidence-based practices have been integrated into courses by employing case studies based on real scenarios. The case studies also include plots that are written in a fun manner to make students want to know what will happen next.
“It meets the course objectives in a very unique and creative way,” Stalter said.
More importantly, basing case studies on reality encourages students to solve problems that they can then use in their jobs.
“We’re not just teaching nurses to be nurses, not just transforming their lives with an education,” Stalter said, “we’re teaching them to transform the lives of those they touch.”
“Nursing education is in a rapid state of change,” Mainous said. “We believe we have responded to the needs of the practicing RN with this redesign, which is cutting edge, transformative, and engaging.”
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There are
about 3 million
nurses in the
United States—
the largest
single group
of healthcare
workers in
the country—
and they are
frequently
involved
in disaster
preparedness,
response, and
recovery.
The nurses
will learn basic
disaster life
support; disaster
leadership
principles;
first aid; how
to provide
psychological
support; how to
prioritize injuries;
and how to
handle legal and
ethical issues.
Disaster Services
By Jim Hannah
Masters
When Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast in 2005, it would become one of the deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history,
leaving more than 1,800 people dead.Tens of thousands of volunteers and troops responded
to the disaster, including a group of doctors and nurses from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
When they returned, they delivered a surprising message to Dan Kirkpatrick, chief nurse of the base hospital—they had trouble working with the civilian disaster relief workers.
“The two groups had different equipment, different leadership models, and basically spoke a different language,” Kirkpatrick recalled. “You would get a nurse from Idaho, a nurse from Florida, a nurse from New Jersey who all knew the basics, but they didn’t know how to put it together the same way.”
That revelation followed by teamwork with regional and national partners ultimately led to the National Disaster Health Consortium at the College of Nursing and Health. This group developed a competency-based interprofessional program that is structured to prepare professionals for a national certification exam.
College of Nursing and Health
develops National Disaster
Health ConsortiumDiscussions about starting such a program
immediately sparked the interest of Sharon Stanley, Wright State alumna and former chief nurse of the American Red Cross. The Red Cross had been looking for competency-based coursework leading to nursing certification.
“Nurses are hungry to understand how they can make their disaster practice better,” said Stanley, Ph.D., RN, who joined the College of Nursing and Health last fall as a visiting professor and director of the program.
There are about 3 million nurses in the United States—the largest single group of healthcare workers in the country—and they are frequently involved in disaster preparedness, response, and recovery as the largest provider of care, as well.
“There are nurses virtually in just about every neighborhood,” Kirkpatrick said. “Most people know that a nurse lives across the street; if a disaster occurs—a tornado, an earthquake, explosion—they’re going to go grab that nurse.”
Stanley and Kirkpatrick, RN, deputy director of the program, say the program will strengthen disaster response and improve the quality of care.
The purpose of the program is to standardize disaster preparedness training to help meet the goal of Homeland Security Presidential Directive 21 of building resilient communities. The program enables nurses and other professionals to have a common core body of knowledge about disaster preparedness.
“If I’m working with you and we come from a common body of knowledge, we can work quicker and better together,” Kirkpatrick said. “If we’ve all been through a common educational process, then we go down the road together in step versus tripping over each other.”
The program is funded in part by the Dayton-based Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation, named after the former public health nurse who was the widow of international patent attorney Harry A. Toulmin Jr.
In addition to Wright State and the American Red Cross, the program also has the support of the Air Force, the Medical Reserve Corps, and public health officials in Washington, D.C.
“This has been a large effort, with a number of people recognizing the need for this kind of a process,” Kirkpatrick said.
Nurses enrolled in the program will first take a series of online courses. They will then undergo intensive training at Wright State’s National Center for Medical Readiness at Calamityville, a 52-acre disaster training zone with concrete passageway–filled buildings, silos, tunnels, ponds, cliffs, and wooded areas.
“This training is going to give them a broad range of different bodies of knowledge and some hands-on experience of how to handle different disaster-related activity,” said Kirkpatrick.
The nurses and others will learn basic disaster life support; disaster leadership principles; first aid; how to provide psychological support; how to prioritize injuries; and how to handle legal and ethical issues.
“It’s not like we’re going to introduce something foreign to them, but we are going to enable them to gain confidence in their disaster skills and put it to work in their communities,” Stanley said.
While the program’s primary focus is on preparing Registered Nurses, including those with advanced nursing degrees, the model for delivery is one of interprofessionalism.
A total of 120 healthcare professionals will go through the program beginning this fall.
Stanley said the nurses will be trained not only how to respond in the immediate aftermath of a disaster, but also how to help communities recover in the long term.
“It’s not just about pulling the person from the car, although we will teach some of that,” she said. “It is absolutely about what do you do in a shelter for the next month? How do you work with that neighborhood? How do you help people get to their new normal in terms of mental health?”
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of
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Recognizing an opportunity to meet a demand for advanced neonatal nursing care in the Dayton area, the College of Nursing and
Health launched a new Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Program.
The master’s-level program is designed for Registered Nurses who have experience in neonatal intensive care and want to build on that foundation to become neonatal nurse practitioners.
“We’re trying to impact the health and well-being of babies in the Miami Valley region,” said CONH Dean Rosalie Mainous, Ph.D. “I’m preparing nurses to take care of the most vulnerable among us to better society, to make sure we meet the expanding need, that we’re healthy and happy.”
According to the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Ohio ranks 13th in the United States in infant mortality, with 7.7 infant deaths per 1,000 live births. The national infant mortality rate is 6.6.
“There’s a public health need for nurses who are trained to take care of very high-risk infants and to help get this infant mortality rate down,” Mainous said.
The program will also meet local and national needs. For every neonatal nurse practitioner who graduates there are an estimated eight open positions nationally.
While the Dayton area has three NICUs, Wright State’s program is the first NNP program in the Miami Valley. Since she joined CONH as dean in 2011, Mainous
New Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Program seeks to meet demand,
improve healthcare in regionBy Bob Mihalek
Caring for the Most
Vulnerable Patients
For every
neonatal nurse
practitioner
who graduates
there are an
estimated eight
open positions.
SUMMER 2014 the Nurse AdvocAte 7
Wright State
and the
University of
Cincinnati
College of
Nursing are
collaborating
on the new
Neonatal Nurse
Practitioner
Program,
sharing several
courses that
students at
both colleges
are required to
take.
Students will
take clinical
courses in the
NICUs at Dayton
Children’s
Hospital, Miami
Valley Hospital,
and Kettering
Hospital.
focused nurses in this role is really important to us.”Launching the program is a natural fit for Mainous. A
board-certified neonatal nurse practitioner, she ran the NNP program at the University of Louisville School of Nursing for a number of years before joining Wright State.
The neonatal nurse practitioner specialty was formalized in the early 1980s by the National Certification Corporation, a not-for-profit organization that provides a national credentialing program for nurses, physicians, and other licensed healthcare personnel.
As advanced-practice nurses, neonatal nurse practitioners prepare academically at the master’s level and receive additional specialized training. They can prescribe drugs, offer treatments, and diagnose patients. They also usually manage several patients at a time. It’s often more cost-effective for a hospital to have a group of NNPs working alongside a doctor, Mainous said. Neonatal nurse practitioners are cost-efficient and can provide a high level of care, she said.
Wright State and the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing are collaborating on the Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Program, sharing courses that students at both colleges are required to take. The collaboration enables both colleges to offer courses the other could not. It also helps make each program more cost-efficient by increasing the number of students in each class. Because of the specialized nature of the program, NNP classes are usually small. Wright State and Cincinnati have their own curriculum and will award their own degrees.
As it does for many of its programs, CONH has reached out to community healthcare providers to provide hands-on clinical training for its students.
Students will have clinical rotations in the NICUs at Dayton Children’s Hospital, Premier Health Miami Valley Hospital, and Kettering Hospital. Allowing students to train at three different NICUs, Mainous said, allows them to learn from different doctors and nurse practitioners and exposes them to different methods of care each hospital may employ.
Mainous expects the Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Program to strengthen CONH’s highly respected advanced-practice graduate offerings.
“We already have a very positive reputation in graduate education, and we have a portfolio of several nurse practitioner concentrations as part of our master’s degree ” she said. “This (NNP) was a hole in that spectrum that I was able to fill because of my background and experiences. It’s a good fit into an existing model that was already successful.”
received numerous requests to start an NNP program.The program is sponsored by Dayton Children’s
Hospital, a local partner that identified a need and has worked collaboratively with Mainous to make this a reality. Lisa Jasin, a neonatal nurse practitioner from Dayton Children’s, will teach the program content and run the clinical courses. Students will also have rotations at the hospital’s neonatal follow-up clinic, where they can work with specialists and children who were preterm infants.
Renae Phillips, RN, the vice president for patient care
services and chief nurse executive at Dayton Chidren’s, said that as the oldest NICU in the community, Dayton Children’s is a natural partner for the NNP program. “It will be great opportunity for nurses in their graduate program to get exposure both here and at other sites across the city to see what really is required to practice in a neonatal nursery,” Phillips said.
“The nurse practitioner is an excellent provider of neonatal care,” she said. “We also know there are other NICUs in our communities and producing more locally
Heart & Hand
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Making a Difference
8 the Nurse AdvocAte SPRING 2013
Fast and Furious
In addition to
working in the
ER, Reichman
serves as
the program
coordinator of
Miami Valley
Hospital’s
Hazmat/
Weapons
of Mass
Destruction
Program,
which trains
ER staff
to care for
patients and
have basic
understanding
of WMD.
A chaotic day is a normal day for an ER nurse.
One minute all of your patients are stable, the next a cardiac arrest comes in, followed by a stroke patient who needs a tPA to break up a blood clot in his brain. At some point, you check on your other patients and hope they’re still under control. Or you might return to find a patient who had been stable is now having a heart attack.
For Jon Reichman, the fast and sometimes-crazy environment is one thing that makes his job as an ER nurse at Premier Health Miami Valley Hospital fun.
“If you can manage chaos, and if you can manage going from zero to 60 in two seconds, then back to zero
By Bob Mihalek
Jon Reichman thrives in the chaos of the ER
again, and do that day in and day out,” he said, “then the ER is a great place.”
There are days in the ER when every minute brings something new, and to care for your patients you must be able to adjust on the fly.
“We call it organized chaos,” he said, “but on some nights it’s just pure chaos.”
“When it’s very busy you can spend 12 hours in the ER and feel like you just clocked in,” he said. “And when it’s slow it feels like you’re in the ER for an eternity.”
Since graduating from the College of Nursing and Health in December 1990, Reichman has worked as a Registered Nurse at Miami Valley Hospital. He initially worked in medical-surgery, then oncology. When the
hospital downsized to cut costs in 1993, Reichman chose to move to the ER. He hasn’t left.
Reichman enjoys working in the ER for multiple reasons. What makes him happiest is receiving letters from patients or their families. “If a patient or a patient’s family takes the time to write a letter to say thank you to a nurse—whether it be me or any other nurse—that is the absolute best reward that you can get,” he said.
Working in the ER also allows him to meet many different kinds of people, from chief executives of Fortune 500 companies to war heroes to people who have made bad choices or who have had horrible things happen to them.
“One minute you can have a CEO in one bed,” he said,
“and the next minute you can have a homeless person who’s just there for a turkey sandwich.”
In addition to working in the ER, Reichman serves as the program coordinator of Miami Valley Hospital’s Hazmat/Weapons of Mass Destruction Program, which trains ER staff to care for patients and have basic understanding of WMD, including biological, chemical, and radiological substances. He also is certified as a hazardous materials technician and in radiological/nuclear operations by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office for Domestic Preparedness. He has designed and offered training programs for his colleagues on caring for someone who has been exposed to hazardous materials or WMD.
“If you have the correct knowledge, hopefully that calms down some of your fears,” he said. “Now you have the knowledge to care for those patients and not be so fearful, and be able to protect yourself so you don’t get hurt.”
Most of the hospital’s hazmat incidents have been industrial accidents or have involved individuals using chemicals, including acid and cyanide. “There are chemicals in this area that if they got into the wrong hands could cause harm to lots of people, and we have to be ready to take care of that,” he said. “And that’s part of the training that we do.”
Reichman almost didn’t become a nurse. When he arrived at Wright State he had no idea what
he wanted to do, but nursing wasn’t something he even considered. During his freshman year, he worked with a guidance counselor to help him determine his major and find a career path. He took some tests that said Reichman should go into nursing. “And I’ll have to say that they were right,” he said.
Reichman takes pride in the care he provides for his patients. Your challenge as a nurse, he says, is to complete your task in a way that makes the patient see that you care. “I’m used to being with my patients for under four hours,” he said. “The quicker I get them home, the quicker I get them upstairs, the happier the patients are.”
It takes nurses and doctors working as a team to give a patient the care that they need, he says. “That’s very rewarding,” he said.
“There’s not many jobs that I know of,” he said, “where at the end of the day you really feel like you’ve done something good.”
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FALL 2012 the Nurse AdvocAte 11
From its first class of 61 nursing students in 1973 to 975 students enrolled today, the Wright State University–Miami Valley College of
Nursing and Health has played a vital role in improving healthcare in our region, state, and beyond. During its first 40 years, 6,874 graduates have earned a total of 7,335 nursing degrees.
From spiral notebooks to iPads and high-tech patient simulators, course delivery and technologies have changed over the years, but one thing has remained constant: a commitment to excellence in nursing education.
While CONH’s graduates no longer wear the traditional white nursing cap, they wear many hats in all levels of nursing today: caregiver, practitioner, advocate, educator, leader, and researcher.
1960sStudies by community healthcare administrators and nurse educators revealed pressing need for baccalaureate nursing program.
1973Wright State University started first baccalaureate nursing program in the Dayton area with 61 students enrolled.
1975Eleven students became first graduates of BSN program.
1976Accreditation from the National League for Nursing (NLN) received.
1978
Master’s in nursing program launched.
1979First master’s degrees awarded.
NLN accreditation for master’s and baccalaureate programs received.
Mobile health unit provided hands-on learning and healthcare to the community.
1983Honor society chapter chartered as Zeta Phi Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau International.
By Karen Strider-Iiames
ofin
2004 Baccalaureate Education Accelerates Career Opportunities in Nursing (BEACON) program launched.
2005Accreditation by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education received.
The Nursing Institute of West Central Ohio, a collaboration among nursing education programs, healthcare agencies, and administrators in a 16-county region, established.
2007An online Doctor of Nursing Practice degree launched in collaboration with the University of Toledo.
BSN program offered in southeast Ohio through a partnership with Adena Health System.
2010College launches the nation’s first master’s program with a flight and disaster nursing specialization.
2011Students study Global Health in the United Kingdom.
2013Psychiatric and Mental Health Nurse Practitioner concentration added to master’s program.
The Nursing Institute of West Central Ohio repositions itself to meet community needs.
2014Neonatal Nurse Practitioner program begun, in collaboration with the University of Cincinnati and Dayton Children’s Hospital.
The National Disaster Health Consortium launches disaster training program.
Ohio H.B. 478 established Wright State, Case Western Reserve, and University of Cincinnati as Advanced Practice Nursing pilot projects.
1995Child and Adolescent Health track began with federal support.
1998Acute Care Nurse Practitioner program initiated with federal funding.
2000Graduate program for school nursing added.
Faculty promoted legislation to allow advanced-practice nurses to function in their full scope of practice and receive prescriptive authority.
2001First National Institute of Nursing Research grant received.
Cameos of Caring, honoring bedside nurses in the region, established.
Four Decades of Leadership
Joyce Randall
Dean,
1972–1974
Donna Deane
Acting dean,
1974–1975,
1983–1984,
1989–1990
Gertrude
Torres
Dean,
1975–1980
Marilyn-Lu
Jacobsen
Acting dean,
1980
Julia George
Acting dean,
1980
Margaret
Moloney
Dean,
1980–1983
Jeanette
Lancaster
Dean,
1984–1989
Jane Swart
Dean,
1990–1998
Patricia Martin
Dean,
1998–2011
Rosalie O’Dell
Mainous
Dean,
2011–present
1984College entered into collaborative agreement with Miami Valley Hospital to support nursing education upon closure of diploma program.
1987Name changed to Wright State University–Miami Valley College of Nursing and Health.
Re-accreditation for baccalaureate and master’s programs received from NLN.
1992W.K. Kellogg Foundation awarded a $2 million grant to Wright State. Nursing was active member of new Center for Healthy Communities.
1993Family Nurse Practitioner track added to master’s program.
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Looking Back
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The Wright State University–Miami Valley College of Nursing and
Health held its 13th annual Cameos of Caring gala on September 14, 2013. The event recognizes outstanding bedside nurses for their contributions to the health and well-being of the community, while raising funds for student scholarships.
This year’s event honored 18 Registered Nurses from Miami Valley healthcare agencies who exemplify wisdom, advocacy, and caring in professional nursing.
Since its inception in 2001, the event has honored more than 200 nurses and provided more than $400,000 to support scholarships.
The next event will be held February 28, 2015, at the Benjamin and Marian Schuster Performing Arts Center.
Portraits of Caring13th annual Cameos of Caring honors bedside’s best
Cameos of Caring
2013 Camoes of Caring Recipients
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Vicky Armstrong Good Samaritan Hospital
Sue HammonsAtrium Medical Center
Cheryl PeckKettering Medical Center
Tonya CamdenSouthview Medical Center
Marybeth HannonSpringfield Regional Medical Center
Laura ReddixFort Hamilton Hospital
Maryam CarleyDayton VA Medical Center
Cristi ClarkGreene Memorial Hospital
Ben Clement Kindred Hospital
Cindy Dixon Dayton Children’s Hospital
Melissa HumphreysUpper Valley Medical Center
Brent MezgerGrandview Medical Center
Jan NicolMercy Memorial Hospital
Mary ParrishSycamore Medical Center
Jon ReichmanMiami Valley Hospital
Nikki Rodriguez-BoraszSoin Medical Center
Janet ShinkleHospice of Dayton
Cindy WeddingVITAS Innovative Hospice
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About CONH
Academic Strategy and Planning Board The College of Nursing and Health is grateful for the contributions of this prestigious group of business, healthcare, and regional leaders who serve on our Academic Strategy and Planning Board.
Joan Brammer, Administrative Director of Nursing, Kettering Health Network
Robin Carter, Director of eContent Solutions, Nursing, Health Sciences, Elsevier
Judith Church, Ph.D., President, Ohio Board of Nursing
Beverly Cobb, Ph.D., Dean for Assessment and Learning Support, Kettering College
Marquetta Colbert, Wright State PhysiciansCol. Marla De Jong, Dean, U.S. Air Force School
of Aerospace MedicineChristine Doggett, Vice President of Home
Healthcare, Home Care by Black StoneTimothy Dressman, Executive Director, St. LeonardSalli Duncan, Vice President of Operations, VRIJayne Gmeiner, Director, Miami Valley Hospital
Jerry R. Colp Center of Nursing ExcellenceCol. Penelope Gorsuch, Deputy Group Commander
and Chief Nurse, Wright-Patterson Medical CenterYevetta Rainey, Director of Nursing, Disease
Prevention Division, Public Health—Dayton and Montgomery County
Beth Hock, Chief Clinical Officer, Kindred Healthcare
Tim Kernan, Director of Health Initiatives, Greater Dayton Area Hospital Association
Brenda Kuhn, Chief Nursing Office, Kettering Health Network
Rebecca Lewis, Vice President of Patient Care, Grandview Medical Center
Anna Jones Monnett, Chief Nurse Executive, Dayton VA Medical Center
Renae Phillips, Chief Nurse Executive and Vice President for Patient Care Services, Dayton Children’s Hospital
Rena Shuchat, Dean of Life and Health Sciences, Sinclair Community College
Trish Wackler, Director of Clinical Education, Premier Health System
Sharon Farra, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, College of Nursing and Health; Regional Nurse Leader, American Red Cross
Daniel Kirkpatrick, Clinical Instructor, College of Nursing and Health; President, Ohio Nurses Association; Mayor, City of Fairbron
Harriet Knowles, Director, The Nursing Institute of West Central Ohio, Wright State
Student Scholarship RecipientsVirginia Hamilton Adoff Memorial Nursing ScholarshipDonna Turner
American Legion Post 763 Howard Batdorf Memorial Nursing Scholarship Grace Crandall
Elta Biles Memorial Scholarship Kelly Minor
Ralph and Joan Campbell Nursing Scholarship Kristen Johnston
College of Nursing and Health Scholarship Alicia Hujo Kristin Pour Heather Hofstetter
Dayton Business Club Education Foundation Arbenita Dervisholli Dylan Richey
Sherry Feeser Memorial Nursing Scholarship Rachel Rees
Nancy P. Janssens Memorial Nursing Scholarship Jessica Hughes
Ruth Layman Scholarship Donna Turner
Lois Renner Lucero Memorial Scholarship Iva Ivanovich
Madigan-Emelko Nursing Scholarship Wesley Hannebaum
Jessie Mihelick Scholarship Meghan Paul
Montgomery County Medical Society Alliance Alyssa Scenters Brittany Vore
Dayton Association of Orthopedic Nurses ScholarshipCourtney Denlinger
Patterson/Miller Nursing Scholarship Julia Bruns
Amy and Chris Praeger Memorial Scholarship Melissa Kashar Suzanne Ackel
St. Leonard Nursing Scholarship Wesley Hannebaum
Jane Swart Memorial ScholarshipBrian Glover Derick Lehmen
Sweeney Family Scholarship for Nursing Rebecca Wynn
Sara Thompson Memorial Nursing ScholarshipAndrea Meyer
William Brent Turner Scholarship Johnnah Markley
Sondra Zinser Nursing Scholarship Pratibha Nigam
Nelson Faerber ScholarshipReese Klenke Grace Crandel Asia Waters Emily Parker Brittany Vore Carly Bushman Meghan Stewart Jessica McCaine
Wright State Foundation Board of Trustees Scholarship Nicole Smith
Mission StatementThe Wright State University–Miami Valley College of Nursing and Health provides excellence in innovative educational programs as the foundation for lifelong learning; serves our community locally, regionally, nationally, and internationally; performs scholarship that enriches and guides the profession of nursing; and empowers faculty, staff, students, and alumni to reach their full potential.
VisionThe Wright State University–Miami Valley College of Nursing and Health will be a leader in the transformation of the educational enterprise in Ohio and beyond through collaborative partnerships, civic engagement, and service, supported by scholarship to advance and empower nursing in an inclusive, respectful environment.
SUMMER 2014 the Nurse AdvocAte 15 14 the Nurse AdvocAte SUMMER 2014
Paving the Way
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REDUCTION OF NURSEMAID’S ELBOW
FOREIGN BODY REMOVAL (E.G., FISH HOOKS AND SPLINTERS)
FINGER AND TOE PROCEDURES (E.G., PARONYCHIA, TREPHINATION)
LOCAL ANESTHESIADIGITAL BLOCKS
INCISION AND DRAINAGE OF ABSCESSES
MINOR LACERATION CARE WITH DERMABOND, STAPLES, SUTURES
CORNEAL ABRASIONS AND FLUORESCEIN EXAMINATIONS
Nursing Institute of West Central Ohiopresents
IMPACTInteractive Minor Procedure and Competency Training
ATTENTION Nurse Practitioner students and practicing Nurse Practitioners!
Increase your knowledge and comfort level in performing procedures with a day of instruction and simulation of office and urgent care procedures.
This one-day, interactive workshop features:
Instruction by board-certified nurse practitioners:
Beverly J. Metze, MSN, FNP-CBrenda B. Young, DNP, RN, FNP-C
Hands-on and individualized practice using state-of-the-art simulations
Presented at your facility or at the Nursing Institute
To learn more, contact the Nursing Institute of West Central Ohio
wright.edu/nursinginstitute (937) 306-1970
COMI NG SOON!
The College
of Nursing
and Health
welcomes new
faculty and
staff members
New Faces
16 the Nurse AdvocAte SUMMER 2014
News & Notes
Sharon Stanley, Ph.D., RN Visiting Professor
As visiting professor in the College of Nursing and Health, Sharon Stanley is assisting in the development of the National Disaster Health Consortium.
Previously, she was the chief nurse
of the American Red Cross, providing leadership, engagement, and direction for the Red Cross nursing network in partnership with the Red Cross National Chair of Nursing, the National Nursing Committee, and Regional Nurse Network.
Before joining the Red Cross, Stanley was program director for the Ohio Center for Public Health Preparedness in Ohio State University’s College of Public Health. She has also served as chief of disaster planning at the Ohio Department of Health, associate professor of community health at Capital University, and local health commissioner.
Stanley served 34 years in the Army Nurse Corps, including 12 on active duty. She graduated from the Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, received the Surgeon General’s “A” proficiency designator and a member of the Order of Military Medical Merit.
She holds multiple graduate degrees, including an M.S. in community health nursing from Wright State, M.A. in security studies (homeland security and defense) from the Naval Postgraduate School, and Ph.D. in health education from Ohio State.
She is a 2013 recipient of the International Red Cross Florence Nightingale Medal and a current Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Executive Nurse Fellow. She was inducted as a Fellow into the American Academy of Nursing in October 2013 and into the Ohio Veterans Hall of Fame in November 2013.
Sharon Farra, Ph.D., RN Assistant Professor
Sharon “Sherry” Farra completed her Ph.D. in nursing in 2012 at the University of Cincinnati. Her degree focus was on the scholarship of teaching and learning in nursing. She also studied virtual reality simulation and disaster
training in her dissertation. She earned an M.S. in nursing (clinical
nurse specialist–adult health) from Wright State University and a BSN from Wayne State University.
Farra has over 16 years of experience as a nurse educator in the classroom, clinical, and online settings. From 1998 to 2012, she taught at Sinclair Community College, where she received the Meritorious Teaching Award three times. She also taught at Miami University and Indiana Wesleyan University.
Her research interests are in disaster, emergency preparedness, and training methodologies. In 2011, she received a $6,000 grant from Sigma Theta Tau to evaluate knowledge retention after virtual simulation activities in disaster training.
Prior to becoming a nurse educator, Farra worked as a staff nurse in the oncology departments of Harper Hospital in Detroit and Good Samaritan Hospital and as a poison information specialist at Dayton Children’s Hospital. She was also a nurse supervisor at Grandview Hospital and a CNS/oncology team manager at Good Samaritan Hospital.
Ferra is active with the American Red Cross, serving as board member of the Clinton County chapter and regional nurse leader for the Dayton and Cincinnati regions. She is also a volunteer for the West Central Ohio Medical Reserve Corps.
Curtis Stein Academic Advisor
As a new advisor at the College of Nursing and Health, Curtis Stein’s main priority is to increase the enrollment in the RN-to-BSN Program.
With 13 years in higher education, he has helped launch a retention office at Simpson
University and served as a recruiter for Ashland University, assistant director of admissions at United Theological Seminary, and enrollment counselor/lead recruiter for Sinclair Community College.
Stein has a B.A. in business administration from Simpson University and an M.A. in clinical counseling from Ashland University, where he graduated with distinction.
Stein’s devotion to education and global travel inspires him and gives him the passion to help students better their lives. “I am excited to be working at Wright State for the College of Nursing and Health,” he said. “I love helping students through the process of discovering their path because I know in the end, they will be helping others.”
Michelle Nkadi Academic Advisor
Wright State alumna Michelle Nkadi joined CONH as an academic advisor.
She previously worked as a graduate admissions and recruitment officer at the University of Cincinnati and as a graduate admissions counselor
at the University of Memphis. Nkadi earned a master’s degree in higher
education/student affairs at Wright State and a B.A. in journalism from Temple University.
Tess Spector-Prague Academic Advisor
Tess Spector-Prague joined the College of Nursing and Health as an academic advisor in September.
Last year, she worked for AmeriCorps providing college access advising for low-income and first-generation juniors and seniors in a Cincinnati
public school. Previously, she served as a human service advising intern at Northeastern University, where she worked with advisors to help students secure field placements.
Spector-Prague earned a B.A. from Roger Williams University in 2008 and an M.S. at Northeastern University in 2011.
Dan Kirkpatrick, RN, was elected president of the Ohio Nurses Association. He previously served on the association’s Board of Directors as first vice president. In November, Kirkpatrick was also elected the mayor of Fairborn, Ohio.
Barbara Fowler, Ph.D., and Marlese Durr, Ph.D., professor of sociology and anthropology, published “Meeting the Health Care Needs of African-Americans: Challenges and Opportunities of the Affordable Health Care Act,” in the Journal of the National Black Nurses Association.
A new article, “Virtual Reality Disaster Training: Translation to Practice,” by Sharon Farra, Ph.D., was accepted for publication in Nurse Education in Practice.
Anita Dempsey, Ph.D., APRN, associate director of the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner Program, received the 2014 Secretary’s Award for Excellence in Nursing—RN Expanded Role Category from the Dayton VA Medical Center.
Kristine Scordo, Ph.D., RN, was recognized for having the “Top cited and top downloaded article in 2012” by the Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners. Her article was titled “Defining Nurse Practitioner Scope of Practice and Associated Regulations: Focus on Acute Care.”
Scordo received the 2013 Outstanding Educator Award from the National Organization of Nurse Practitioner Faculties.
She is the guest editor for a symposium on differential diagnosis in critical care for the American Association of Critical Care’s August 2014 issue of Advanced Critical Care. Her article “Teaching Graduate Nursing Practitioner Students Effective Prescribing Using the WHO Guide to Good Prescribing” is forthcoming in The Nurse Practitioner.
Marie Bashaw, D.N.P., RN, received the CGEAN Early Career Award. She presented “The Evaluation of Coaching as an Evidence-Based Intervention for Nurse Managers” at Sigma Theta Tau International’s 42nd Biennial Convention in Indianapolis.
Sherrill Smith, Ph.D., was promoted to associate professor with tenure, effective August 1, 2013.
Tracy Brewer, D.N.P., RN, received a 2013 Faculty Award for Excellence in Early Career Achievement. Since joining CONH in 2009, Brewer, an assistant professor, has distinguished herself as an innovative
teacher and leader, championing team-based learning and exploring opportunities for interprofessional education activities with the Boonshoft School of Medicine. She was also appointed director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice program.
Kathy Keister, Ph.D., RN, received the Frederick A. White Distinguished Professor of Professional Service Award from Wright State. Keister is an associate professor and director of the Accelerated BSN Program.
Jeanette P. Little, D.N.P., RN, and Marie A. Bashaw, D.N.P., RN, published “New Graduate Nurse Residency: A Network Approach” in the June 2013 issue of the Journal of Nursing Administration.
Tracy Brewer, D.N.P., RNC, and Donna Miles Curry, Ph.D., RN, presented “Workforce Issues Outcome Measurements: An Exploration of Contextual Factors Impacting Nurses Implementation of Evidence: Readiness, Beliefs, Skills, and Needs” at the Sigma Theta Tau International’s 42nd Biennial Convention in Indianapolis. Curry also presented “Clinical Models to Improve Healthcare for Children: Family Centered Pediatric Pain Management: A Global Nursing Education Strategy.”
Donna Miles Curry, Ph.D., RN, was recognized for a milestone achievement in CONH. She has generated external and internal grant funding in excess of $1 million to support student success.
Academic Advisor Nicole Loy was selected by the Army ROTC to attend the All-American Bowl on January 4 in Texas.
Dean Rosalie Mainous, Ph.D., APRN, was inducted as a fellow in the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners in June 2014.
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214000/201310-12585/1404/3.1M
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U.S. Postage PaidDayton, Ohio 45401
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Wright State University–Miami Valley College of Nursing and Health3640 Colonel Glenn Hwy.Dayton, OH 45435-0001
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