School of Nursing and Health Studies

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Georgetown University School of Nursing and Health Studies

Established: 1903
Type: Private
Dean: Bette Keltner
Faculty: 41
Students: 675
Undergraduates: 453
Postgraduates: 222
Location: Washington, D.C., USA
Campus: Urban
Website: http://snhs.georgetown.edu
[1]

The Georgetown University School of Nursing and Health Studies (NHS) is one of the four undergraduate schools of Georgetown University. Founded in 1903 as the School of Nursing, it added three other health related majors in 1999 and appended its name to become the School of Nursing and Health Studies.[2] The school has been at the forefront of education in the health care field, offering many programs unique to America's elite institutions. Offering undergraduate and graduate programs in the health sciences, graduates are prepared to enter the complex fields of medicine, law, health policy, and nursing. NHS is made up of the Department of Health Systems Administration, the Department of Human Science, the Department of International Health, and the Department of Nursing.[3]

The Department of Human Science completed the newest undergraduate research laboratory space on campus in 2006 called the Discovery Center. The Discovery Center includes a Basic Health Science Teaching Laboratory, a Molecular and Cell Biology Research Laboratory, a Cell Culture Room, and a Preparation and Instrument Room.

NHS is also home to GUS - Georgetown University Simulator - a full-body, robotic mannequin that can realistically replicate physiological conditions and symptoms and pharmacological responses.

Contents

[edit] Degrees Offered

[edit] Bachelor of Science

Graduates of these programs have pursued careers and/or graduate study in the following areas: clinical research, physical therapy, medicine, healthcare law, public health, epidemiology, pharmaceutical sales/marketing, advanced practice nursing, dentistry, physician assistant, forensics, healthcare consulting, hospital administration, and many other fields. Certificates are also available for undergraduate students in the following subject areas: International Health and Population Health.

[edit] Master of Science

  • MS in Health Systems Administration
  • MS in Nursing
    • Acute and Critical Care Clinical Nurse Specialist
    • Acute Care Nurse Practitioner
    • Direct Entry to Advanced Practice
    • Family Nurse Practitioner
    • Nurse Anesthesia
    • Nursing Education
    • Nurse-Midwifery/Women's Health

[edit] References