Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Grants to aid nurse training at universiti­es

$2.6 million in federal money to go to UA, UAMS programs

- JAIME ADAME

About $2.6 million in federal grant money over the next three years will help the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and the University of Arkansas increase the number of trained nurse practition­ers, professors at the two universiti­es said.

“We, as a state, are underserve­d medically, and we need to address shortages, especially in the rural areas,” said Claudia Beverly, a professor at UAMS.

Beverly is the principal investigat­or for a proposal that will receive about $1.6 million in funding over the next three years from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

“Nurse practition­ers are primary care providers,” Beverly said. The grant will support training for master’s students and post-master’s students specializi­ng in the care of adults and older adults.

Beverly noted the aging of the baby boomer generation has led to an increase in the number of elderly patients.

“We do not have a work force prepared to care for those older adults,” Beverly said. Students will be placed in seven centers associated with the Arkansas Aging Initiative, a program that’s part of the UAMS Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging.

Beverly said the grant money will expand opportunit­ies for UAMS nursing students, who she said have a strong interest in becoming nurse practition­ers. At UAMS, nurse practition­ers can choose among various tracks of study, such as pediatrics or gerontolog­y.

“We have a waiting list in every one of those tracks,” Beverly said, adding the goal is to train 50 to 60 additional nurse practition­ers with the grant money.

At the University of Arkansas, grant money of $1,081,735 over three years will help students in the university’s Doctor of Nursing Practice program, which

enrolled its first students in the fall of 2013.

“We want to expand. We want 30 ‘DNP’ nurse practition­ers in rural, underserve­d Arkansas in the next three years,” said Anna Jarrett, an assistant professor and the principal investigat­or for the grant.

University faculty will recruit health care profession­als at seven sites, which have yet to be determined, Jarrett said. The university will partner with the nonprofit organizati­on Community Health Centers of Arkansas to choose some of the sites.

Profession­als at clinical sites, known as preceptors, will work with students and provide clinical training.

Jarrett said she is creating an online course for the preceptors. The course will explain what the students need to get from each clinical experience, she said.

The federal money comes from the Health Resources and Services Administra­tion, which last week announced grants totaling more than $94 million to support training of health care profession­als, including about $57.4 million specifical­ly for nurse training.

Arkansas State University will also receive money, with an initial award of $67,188 announced last week to assist with nurse anesthetis­t traineeshi­ps.

Federal lawmakers have proposed a $646 million cut in funding for the Department of Health and Human Services for the 2016 fiscal year, according to the American Associatio­n of Colleges of Nursing. This would result in cuts of $10.99 million for nursing work force developmen­t programs, a funding reduction of 4.7 percent, according to the associatio­n.

“It’s very important to schools that we keep this funding,” said Robert Rosseter, the associatio­n’s chief communicat­ions officer.

Rosseter said the average age for nursing faculty members is over 60 years old.

“We don’t have enough faculty” to teach future nurses, Rosseter said. “Bringing more people into graduate programs, it kind of increases the pool of potential faculty that we have.”

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