Chattanooga Times Free Press

UTC aims to ease nursing shortage

- BY CARMEN NESBITT

As the county and nation suffer from a nursing shortage, the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a is launching an accelerate­d nursing degree program to get more nurses in the field sooner.

UTC officials announced the accelerate­d bachelor of science in nursing degree program in a news release Monday. It will begin this fall.

The rigorous program is intended for those who already have bachelor’s degrees in any field and who want to transition into a nursing career, the news release said.

“It will be a tremendous amount of work,” Chris Smith, director of the UTC School of Nursing, said in a phone call. “This is for the individual who really has the desire to become competent as a bachelor-prepared nurse. They have to be able to handle a rigorous program.”

Unlike the traditiona­l nursing degree pathway that takes around five semesters to complete, the accelerate­d degree is completed in three semesters, or one calendar year, Smith said.

“It’s continuous coursework,” Smith said. “Students will need a strong support system.”

Of the 59 credit hours required by the program, more than a third — 21 credit hours — will be completed in clinical settings, giving essential hands-on experience.

“The need for the accelerate­d program stems from a critical nursing shortage impacting health care not only in the Chattanoog­a community but across the region, the state and the country,” UTC Provost and Senior

Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs Jerold Hale said in a news release. “The benefit of an accelerate­d program is that it effectivel­y addresses workforce demands by increasing the number of desperatel­y needed nurses. UTC will be playing a role in helping put nurses out there in a much quicker time frame.”

It also stems from a need to expand the university’s existing nursing program, which, enrollment­wise, has been unaffected by the pandemic, Smith said.

“We’re very fortunate in the School of Nursing,” Smith said. “We’ve not seen a downturn in applicatio­ns. Although my counterpar­ts across the state and country have seen a significan­t downturn, we haven’t.”

Smith said the university has more applicants than available spots and has had to turn away qualified applicants at a time when demand is high.

“(Hospitals) are working toward getting adequate staffing back in all their facilities because nurses are the backbone of a hospital,” Smith said. “Other people come and go, but nurses are always there, and if nurses aren’t there to take care of patients, hospitals have no reason to exist.”

Chattanoog­a-area health care leaders praised the new program.

“As it’s a well-known fact that all of health care faces a critical shortage of nurses and nurse leaders. We’re excited UTC is helping meet this important demand by offering accelerate­d opportunit­ies for nursing students to meet their educationa­l goals,” Deborah Deal, chief nurse executive at Parkridge Health System, said in a news release.

Applicatio­ns are open. Those interested in applying may contact April Anderson at AprilAnder­son@utc.edu or call 423-425-4670 for more informatio­n.

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