Press Release  

For Immediate Release

Hartford Institute and American Association of Colleges of Nursing
Honor Nursing Schools for Innovations in Geriatric Education


WASHINGTON, D.C., January 12, 2004 -- The John A. Hartford Foundation Institute for Geriatric Nursing, in collaboration with the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), is pleased to announce the winners of the 2003 Awards for Exceptional Baccalaureate Curriculum in Gerontologic Nursing. Presented at AACN's fall meeting, awards were given to five schools of nursing this year: Biola University (CA), Florida Atlantic University, New York University, University of Arkansas for the Medical Sciences and University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

"We are delighted to honor nursing schools at the forefront of preparing students through outstanding geriatric curricula and innovative programs," said AACN President Kathleen Ann Long, PhD, APRN, FAAN. "The 2003 winners should be proud of their contributions to geriatric care which serve as shining examples for other schools to follow."

Now in its sixth year, this national awards program was created to recognize model baccalaureate programs in nursing with a strong focus on gerontological nursing. Awards were presented to nursing programs that exhibit exceptional, substantive, and innovative baccalaureate curriculum in this subject area. Beyond innovation, programs must also demonstrate relevance in the clinical environment and have the ability to be replicated at schools of nursing across the country.

For the first time this year, awards were presented in four separate categories:

  • Geriatric Faculty Member Award
    Theris A. Touhy, ND, APRN, BC, Florida Atlantic University

  • Infusing Geriatrics into the Curriculum Award
    Biola University (CA) and New York University

  • Clinical Settings in Geriatric Nursing Award
    University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

  • Stand-Alone Baccalaureate Geriatric Course Award
    University of North Carolina at Greensboro

"In the interest of better serving our aging population, U.S. nursing schools are moving to adapt curriculum, add coursework and enhance faculty development to better prepare the nursing workforce to care for older adults," added Dr. Long. "We are delighted to join with the Hartford Institute in honoring curriculum leaders and sharing their examples with the world."

Curricula and geriatric care models advanced by the 2003 winners have been summarized and distributed to nursing programs nationwide. Winning abstracts are also available online at http://www.aacn.nche.edu/Education/Hartford/AwardWinners.pdf. For an application for the 2004 awards competition, contact the Hartford Institute at (212) 998-5568 or via their Web site at http://www.hartfordign.org.


The Hartford Institute for Geriatric Nursing, proudly housed at the Division of Nursing, The Steinhardt School of Education of New York University, seeks to shape the quality of health care older Americans receive by promoting the highest level of geriatric competence in all nurses. By raising the standards of nursing care, the Hartford Institute aims to ensure that people age with optimal function, comfort, and dignity. The Hartford Institute identifies and develops best practices in nursing care of older adults and infuses these practices into the education of every nursing student and the work environment of every practicing professional nurse. The Hartford Institute encourages national leadership to establish best practice as the standard for geriatric nursing care. http://www.hartfordign.org.

The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) is the national voice for university and four-year college education programs in nursing. Representing 575 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. www.aacn.nche.edu


Profile of the 2003 Award Winners

2003 Geriatric Faculty Member Award
Theris A. Touhy, ND, APRN, BC, Florida Atlantic University

Profile. Dr. Touhy has been inspiring, mentoring, and teaching students how to be expert gerontological nurses for 23 years at Florida Atlantic University. She is passionate about the specialty and communicates that passion to students, practicing nurses, community groups, and national and international nursing organizations. Dr. Touhy's knowledge and experience in care of older adults, long-term care, and care of people with dementia, assists students in learning about and appreciating the breadth and depth of the specialty of gerontological nursing. As is evident in the supporting letters from students and in her yearly evaluations, many students have been mentored by her and have chosen to go on for further study in gerontological nursing. Over the years, she has worked with several students in the baccalaureate program to design their 225 hour preceptorship in gerontological nursing, connecting them with expert gerontological nurses in the community for mentoring. She is a frequent lecturer on gerontological nursing in many of the nursing courses. About half of the students who have completed the master's program in gerontological nursing in the College were recruited, mentored, and taught by Dr. Touhy. She is currently designing a project to establish a Gerontological Nursing Scholars Program in the Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing. The proposal includes scholarship support for two junior students who will have experiences in their clinical courses in acute care and community nursing directed toward care of older adults, participate in research with the gerontological nursing faculty, and complete a 225 hour preceptorship in gerontological nursing. As part of this program, the College will partner with four local nursing homes to develop Centers of Excellence in Long Term Caring. Each student will be mentored by an expert gerontological nurse in the community as well as a gerontological nursing faculty. Dr. Touhy is also working with a gerontological nursing faculty in Scotland to develop international video conferencing and student and faculty exchanges.

2003 Infusing Geriatrics into the Curriculum Award
Biola University (CA)
Rebekah L. Fleeger, PhD, RN, Chair, Department of Baccalaureate Nursing
Cheryl Zukerberg, PhD, RN, C, PHN, MSN, GNP, Faculty Contact

Abstract. The gerontologic nursing curriculum is integrated throughout the three years of clinical nursing. Students learn to understand and appropriately handle the needs of older adults living in the community or located in acute care or long-term care facilities. First year students focus on developmental content related to older adults. Clinical practice in acute care settings allows students to recognize the importance of treating each older adult as a unique person with individual needs. In the second year, a core gerontological nursing course provides experiences using different nursing roles and settings. Students help older adults adapt and cope with the spiritual, physical, social, financial, and emotional changes that come with aging. They care for frail older adults who are further compromised by multisystem failures. The gerontologic curriculum focuses on healthy aging; assessment; pathophysiology of acute and chronic diseases; treatment and nursing interventions; advocacy; development of family and community resources; and ethical, legal, and end-of-life issues that confront older adults and caregivers. By graduation students will have worked at least eight times in faculty run nursing clinics with older adults who are homeless and four times in cross-cultural experiences with older adults in faculty run nursing clinics in Mexico. Students have repeatedly verbalized the differences they have made in the lives of older adults and the impact older adults have made on their lives. All graduates of this program are equipped with the comprehensive gerontological nursing skills necessary to work with older adults in a wide variety of health care settings. Surveys of students have shown increased positive attitudes toward older adults and increased interest in providing nursing care for older adults.

2003 Infusing Geriatrics into the Curriculum Award
New York University, The Steinhardt School of Education, Division of Nursing
Terry Fulmer, PhD, RN, FAAN, Head Division of Nursing
Annemarie Dowling-Castronovo, APRN, BC, Faculty Contact

Abstract. New York University's Division of Nursing (NYUDON) has substantially increased both the quantity and quality of gerontological theoretical and experiential content since January 2002. Utilizing both Gerontological Nursing Content Mapping (The Hartford Institute's Best Nursing Practices in Care of Older Adults Curriculum Guide, 2001 ) and Baseline and Enhancing Gerontological Content Tools NYUDON faculty identified areas requiring additional gerontological emphasis and have been measuring successful outcomes of gero-enhancing strategies. NYU curriculum includes a stand-alone gerontological nursing course and systematic integration of gerontological nursing content throughout six undergraduate clinical nursing courses.


2003 Clinical Settings in Geriatric Nursing Award
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Linda Hodges, EdD, RN, Chair, Department of Baccalaureate Nursing
Sheila Collier, EdD, RN, Faculty Contact

Abstract. The University Of Arkansas Medical Sciences College Of Nursing offers a curriculum that emphasizes health promotion and health prevention in addition to illness/disease management of older adults. The course, Nursing Care of the Older Adult, focuses on the health needs of older adults in community, ambulatory, rehabilitative, acute, long-term care, and end of life settings. Placement of the Nursing Care of the Older Adult course as a semester long offering at the senior level and concurrent with the Community Health Nursing course provides students with a global view of the needs of older adults in diverse settings. The didactic component of the older adult course occurs in both the traditional classroom and Web based modules via the Internet. The clinical component of the course consists of 90 clinical hours with older adults in diverse settings.


2003 Stand-Alone Baccalaureate Geriatric Course Award
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Lynne G. Pearcey, PhD, RN, Dean
Beth Barba, PhD, RN, Faculty Contact

Abstract. The gerontological nursing curriculum at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro prepares student nurses to provide high-quality care to older adults and their families across settings. Geriatric content is integrated throughout the curriculum and prior learning is concentrated in two required courses at senior level and two elective courses. Stand-alone gerontology courses have been required in the UNCG curriculum since 1986-1987. Both the generic and RN-BSN curricula include required gerontological courses and clinical experiences that combine gerontology, community, and leadership. Faculty in the didactic courses are prepared at the graduate level and are certified as advanced practice gerontological nurses. At least 25% of faculty teaching in the clinical courses have educational or experiential gerontological expertise. Other teaching faculty are attending faculty development sessions on geriatric nursing issues and receive consultation on teaching strategies.

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CONTACT: Robert Rosseter
(202) 463-6930, x231
rrosseter@aacn.nche.edu

 

 

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