University of Virginia School of Nursing

University of Virginia School of Nursing
Type Public
Established 1901
Dean Dorrie K. Fontaine
Students 681
Location Charlottesville, VA, USA
38°01′53″N 78°29′56″W / 38.03139°N 78.49889°W / 38.03139; -78.49889Coordinates: 38°01′53″N 78°29′56″W / 38.03139°N 78.49889°W / 38.03139; -78.49889
Campus Suburban
Website http://www.nursing.virginia.edu/

The University of Virginia School of Nursing, established in 1901,[1] is a world-renowned school of nursing education. For more than one hundred years, it has been at the forefront of nursing education, service, and research. It has an enrollment of approximately 681 undergraduate and graduate students, and is consistently rated in the top 5% of Nursing schools in the United States.[2] The dean of the nursing school is Dorrie K. Fontaine.[3]

History

The School of Nursing was founded in 1901. In 1928, the first baccalaureate nursing program in the South began at the University of Virginia. Men were first admitted in the 1960s. The first nursing PhD program offered in Virginia began at the School of Nursing in 1982, and in 2008, it became the first facility in Virginia to offer a DNP (Doctor of Nursing Practice) degree- the terminal degree for nursing clinicians.[4]

Academics

The School of Nursing offers a variety of options for attaining a nursing degree.[5]

Undergraduate

Graduate

Affiliations and accreditation

The School of Nursing is a member of the Council of Baccalaureate and Higher Degree programs of the National League for Nursing, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, and the Southern Council on Collegiate Education for Nursing of the Southern Regional Education Board. The school is nationally accredited, and approved by the Virginia State Board of Nursing. The School of Nursing is also the sole American nursing school to participate in Universitas 21, with exchange and research programs set up with the University of Auckland in New Zealand, and Oxford University in the United Kingdom.

The School of Nursing has become a national leader in rural health care research. It is the first and only school of nursing in the country to be funded by the National Institute for Mental Health to create a Center in rural mental health–-the Southeastern Rural Mental Health Research Center.[13] It is also home to the National Institute of Health-funded Rural Health Care Research Center. Faculty and students volunteer in the yearly Remote Area Medical Health Clinic in Wise, Virginia, a free emergency medicine clinic that sees thousands of patients a day for three days every July.[14]

Rankings

The School of Nursing is ranked in the 95th percentile of US nursing schools, tied in 19th place overall of 448.[15] Four graduate nursing programs are also rated in the 95th percentile- Psychiatric/Mental Health (#5), Clinical Nurse Specialist-Adult/Medical-Surgical (#6), Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (#12), and Family Nurse Practitioner (#16). It is currently ranked as the best school in the United States for doctoral student-authored [16] by the National Institute of Health.[17] Approximately one-third of the School of Nursing's full-time faculty members hold national nursing Academy fellowships.

See also

References

  1. "A Message from the Dean". University of Virginia School of Nursing. Retrieved 2008-05-04.
  2. "UVA School of Nursing Reports Record Enrollment in Fall 2007" (PDF). University of Virginia School of Nursing. Retrieved 2008-05-04.
  3. Graves, Betsy (2008-04-25). "Fontaine selected to lead Nursing School". Cavalier Daily.
  4. http://nursing.virginia.edu/media/wownovember2008.pdf
  5. "Academic Programs". University of Virginia School of Nursing. Retrieved 2008-05-04.
  6. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program
  7. Undergraduate RN to BSN Program
  8. Third Year Transfer to BSN
  9. Master's of Science in Nursing Programs
  10. Post-Master's Programs
  11. Doctoral Programs
  12. Clinical Nurse Leader program
  13. "Southeastern Rural Mental Health Research Center: Mission and History". Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  14. Otto, Mary (2008-11-09). "Hidden Hurt". Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  15. US News and World Report, Top Nursing Schools, 2007.
  16. http://grants.nih.gov/training/nrsa.htm National Research Service Award
  17. http://www.nih.gov National Institute of Health.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, August 12, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.