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UA nursing classes, such as those taught by Dr. Marsha Adams,
associate professor, are growing in popularity as the College
set a student enrollment record this semester.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Enrollment in The University of Alabama
Capstone College of Nursing
hit an all-time high this semester – welcome news to a health
care industry reeling in the midst of a national nursing shortage.
The flood of students has led to creative ways of obtaining sufficient
classroom and laboratory space.
Fall 2003 enrollment in the College is 791 students, an all-time
high in the College’s 27-year history, according to UA records.
The record enrollment was driven, in part, by 165 freshman students,
representing a 135 percent increase from the freshman class of three
years ago.
“People have now rediscovered nursing,” said Dr. Sara
Barger, dean of UA’s Capstone College of Nursing.
More UA nursing faculty and currently enrolled students have become
heavily involved in helping potential students rediscover the profession,
said Steve Robinson, director of nursing student services at UA.
New UA programs, such as Nightingale Day and the Joseph S. Bruno
Nursing Academy, which give potential students insights into nursing,
have been popular, Robinson said. “I’m confident that
the more students find out about our program, then the more likely
they are to come to the Capstone.”
Nursing enrollment increases can’t happen quickly enough
for the health care industry. According to a U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics report more than one million new and replacement nurses
will be needed by 2010. According to another recent report, more
than 30 states now face Registered Nurse shortages, and 44 states
are expected to have shortages by 2020.
This year marks the second consecutive year UA’s freshman
nursing class has seen a sharp increase. In fall 2002, 108 freshmen
enrolled, up from the 77 who enrolled in 2001. Total enrollment
had dipped as low as 360 students in the fall of 1987.
“The reality was people were not interested in nursing and
now they are,” Barger said. “They are incredibly interested
in nursing.”
Bountiful employment opportunities and accompanying salary jumps
are likely contributors to that interest. The national average for
starting salaries for college nursing graduates in 2002 was $37,803,
a 3.3 percent increase from the previous year, according to the
National Association of Colleges and Employers. This increase came
at a time when starting salaries from many other fields showed a
slight decline.
The tremendous enrollment growth at UA has created challenges,
Barger said. Students are eligible for promotion into the nursing
curriculum after completing 66 hours of core classes, with a heavy
science concentration. This fall, 61 students met the promotion
criteria, but the biggest classroom in the College held only 51
students, and the largest lab could only accommodate seven hospital
beds, Barger said.
A laboratory large enough to hold 25 beds was needed, and it needed
to be in close proximity to the classroom as students are taught
nursing techniques in class and then immediately move to the lab
to practice them. “You can’t do that when the classroom
is on one end of campus and the lab is on the other,” Barger
said. “You really have only two choices, you can say, ‘it’s
not our fault, we don’t have resources,’ or you can
go out and do something innovative.”
With only two weeks left before the start of the fall semester,
the College was continuing to grapple with the space limitation
problem. Barger contacted Kim Ingram, associate commissioner of
mental health, and brainstormed possible solutions. Ingram contacted
Bryce Hospital administrators and located both classroom and laboratory
space at the hospital, whose property joins UA property. Ingram
also located 25 hospital beds that Northport’s S.D. Allen
Nursing Home was willing to donate to the College’s lab.
“The support of the employees at Bryce Hospital has been
unbelievable,” Barger said. Those employees cleaned and painted
the space for the clinical practice laboratory, storage areas and
faculty office areas and even assisted with moving the hospital
beds and bedside tables donated by the nursing home and overbed
tables donated by DCH Regional Medical Center.
“It’s a story of shared resources for the greater
good, and the greater good is producing these nurses that Alabama
so desperately needs,” Barger said.
The Capstone College of Nursing founded in 1976, graduates approximately
100 nurses a year from its baccalaureate program. Its graduate program
for nurse case managers is one of the most innovative in the country.
Partnerships with many of Alabama’s community colleges make
obtaining a bachelor’s or master’s degree in nursing
a realistic goal for registered nurses. With nearly 800 students
and 28 faculty, the College supplies RNs and nurse case managers
to many Alabama health care facilities and others throughout the
United States. The College also runs a primary care clinic in rural
Alabama to provide care for rural patients and rural learning experiences
for students.
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