Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Amid high demand, MSOE expanding nursing offerings

- Devi Shastri

Seeking to meet historic enrollment growth and citing a shortage of nurses nationwide, the Milwaukee School of Engineerin­g announced Monday a major laboratory expansion, new academic programs and an industry partnershi­p that aims to change the way psychiatri­c nurses are trained. “There is a critical shortage of nurses in our region and our country. Our population is growing and it is aging,” MSOE President John Walz said. MSOE saw its largest class of nursing students in history last year, with 63 freshmen boosting total nursing enrollment to more than 200. And applicatio­ns for next year are up more than 20%, Walz said. Funded by a donation from MSOE board member and alumna Kathleen

Ruehlow, the school plans a 2,200square-foot expansion to its nursing lab space, adding simulation rooms in which faculty can train students in scenarios ranging from single-patient care in a home or outpatient clinic, to large multibed clinics to even community disaster scenarios.

In fall 2013, Ruehlow provided financial support to relocate the college’s nursing school to the new, $3 million Ruehlow Nursing Complex. Ruehlow declined to specify how much the gift for the new expansion was but said she is glad for the chance to support the school and wants it to be “the best it can be.”

MSOE will establish several new programs in the growing nursing school, all aimed at addressing specific shortages across the country.

One is a new gerontolog­y certificate program. Another is a new direct entry master’s in nursing, designed to create a pathway into nursing for students who have a bachelor’s degree in a different field. Graduates will leave the program with a bachelor’s and master’s in nursing and will have two paths to specialize in: leadership and management, or psychiatri­c mental health.

The new psychiatri­c mental health program will benefit from a partnershi­p with Rogers Behavioral Health, a Wisconsin-based not-for-profit treatment and advocacy center for a range of mental health disorders.

“This year, more individual­s will take their life by suicide or accidental overdose than the lives that will be taken from us through homicide,” said Paul Mueller, CEO of Rogers Behavioral Health’s Hospital Division. “It’s an alarming statistic and clearly we are in the midst of a mental health and addiction crisis.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States