The John A. Hartford
Foundation Awards $1.8 Million Grant
to AACN to Support Careers in Geriatric Nursing
WASHINGTON, DC, April 28, 2004 -
The John A. Hartford Foundation of New York awarded new
grant funding to the American Association of Colleges
of Nursing (AACN) to extend the successful Creating Careers
in Geriatric Advanced Practice Nursing program. The $1.8
million award will enable graduate nursing programs nationwide
to prepare more advanced practice nurses who specialize
in geriatric nursing care.
"AACN applauds the nursing advocates at the Hartford
Foundation for their ongoing commitment to improving the
quality of care available to older adults," said
AACN President Jean E. Bartels. "By supporting the
development of nurses with expertise in geriatric care,
nursing colleges and universities will be able to expand
their programs and inject a larger number of master's
degree-prepared nurses into the health care workforce."
The need for geriatric advanced practice
nurses (APNs) is growing, but the number of students pursuing
this specialty has not kept pace with the demand. To compound
the issue, the distribution of geriatric APNs varies greatly
across regions and health care settings. In response to
this gap, AACN and The John A. Hartford Foundation launched
the Creating Careers in Geriatric Advanced Practice Nursing
program in 2001. Through this initiative, AACN provides
funding to schools of nursing with geriatric APN programs
to expand their student base. In addition to eliminating
financial barriers to education, the project also facilitates
networking, mentorship, role modeling, and leadership
activities between scholarship awardees and experts in
geriatric nursing. Stronger links between students and
clinical leaders are helping to solidify the role of the
geriatric APN and attract new students to the field.
To date, schools of nursing have
awarded competitive scholarship funds to over 160 students
at 23 institutions nationwide, including:
-
Boston College
- Case Western Reserve University (OH)
-
Duke University
- Emory University
-
George Mason University
(VA)
-
Long Island University,
Brooklyn Campus
-
Northeastern University
(MA)
-
Oregon Health &
Sciences University
-
Radford University (VA)
-
Rush University (IL)
-
Seattle Pacific University
-
University of California,
Los Angeles
On April 21, 2004, AACN issued a
Request for Proposals (RFP) to begin the process of distributing
the new grant funds to schools of nursing. Three-year
awards will be provided to schools with geriatric advanced
practice nursing programs, including traditional master's
degrees, accelerated RN to master's degree programs, master's
degrees for non-nursing college graduates, and post-master's
certificate tracks. Up to $17,000 will be awarded per
year per student to cover one half the tuition and documented
academic fees. Schools must provide 1-to-1 matching funds.
The annual number of scholarship students can vary in
each school. Schools must demonstrate that funds will
be used to increase enrollment in geriatric nursing programs;
show how recruitment efforts will target under-represented
groups in APN programs; and describe how leadership development
is built into their geriatric APN programs.
Schools seeking grant funds must
submit a proposal by 5:00 pm EDT on June 15, 2004. The
RFP is posted on the AACN Web site at http://www.aacn.nche.edu/Education/Hartford/RFP404.pdf.
For more information, contact Deirdre Thornlow, AACN's
Director of Gerontology Projects, at dthornlow@aacn.nche.edu.
The American Association of Colleges
of Nursing is the national voice for university and four-year-college
education programs in nursing. Representing more than
580 member schools of nursing at public and private institutions
nationwide, AACN's educational, research, governmental
advocacy, data collection, publications, and other programs
work to establish quality standards for bachelor's- and
graduate-degree nursing education, assist deans and directors
to implement those standards, influence the nursing profession
to improve health care, and promote public support of
baccalaureate and graduate nursing education,
research, and practice. Web site: http://www.aacn.nche.edu
The John A. Hartford Foundation, Inc.
of New York is a private philanthropy established in 1929
by John A. Hartford. Mr. Hartford and his brother, George
L. Hartford, both former chief executives of the Great
Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, left the bulk of their
estates to the Foundation upon their deaths in the 1950s.
Prior to 1979, the Foundation primarily supported clinically-oriented
biomedical research projects. Subsequently, it focused
its support on improving the quality and financing of
health care and enhancing the capacity of the health care
system to accommodate the nations growing elderly
population. Since 1995 the Foundation has focused extensively
on enhancing the nations capacity to provide effective
and affordable care to its growing older adult population
through grantmaking related to enhancing geriatric research
and training (physicians, nurses, social workers), and
integrating and improving health services for older adults.
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CONTACT: Robert Rosseter
(202) 463-6930, x231
rrosseter@aacn.nche.edu
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