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Health Resources and Services Administration

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, August 1, 2008
CONTACT: HRSA PRESS OFFICE
301-443-3376
 

HRSA Awards $12 Million to Support Nursing Faculty and Increase Diversity in the Nursing Workforce

The Health Resources and Services Administration ( HRSA) today announced $12 million in grants to 36 academic institutions and three hospital organizations to further the education and training of the nation’s nurses and nursing educators, and increase diversity in the nursing workforce.

“Two of the programs we are announcing grants for today – the Nurse Education Practice and Retention Program and the Faculty Development: Integrated Technology into Nursing Education and Practice Initiative – support a variety of efforts at universities to improve the training of nurses,” HRSA Administrator Elizabeth Duke said. “The other grants, distributed through our Nursing Workforce Diversity program, seek to increase the number of nurses from disadvantaged backgrounds. Because those graduates often return to serve in their home communities, these grants help improve the distribution of patient care and reduce persistent health disparities.”

Today’s awards come from the following programs:

  • Twenty-eight new Nurse Education Practice and Retention Program grants worth $8.5 million were awarded to 25 academic institutions and three hospital organizations.

These grants support initiatives to address the nursing shortage by strengthening capacity for nurse education, practice and retention. The March 2004 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses, supported by HRSA, and a September 2004 HRSA Bureau of Health Professions report on the projected supply and demand of the nursing workforce provide the basis for such targeted initiatives The program supported 21,145 participants in FY 2007.

  • Two new grants totaling almost $600,000 for “Faculty Development: Integrated Technology into Nursing Education and Practice Initiative” went to Drexel University in Philadelphia for $299,834 and the University of Washington, Seattle, Wash., for $299,633.

These grant funds support nursing collaboratives – partnerships among collegiate schools of nursing, academic health centers, accredited public or private institutions and other organizations. Program efforts help nursing faculty integrate technologies related to simulated learning, informatics and telehealth into the nursing curriculum.

  • Nine new Nursing Workforce Diversity Program awards totaling $2.8 million were made to seven universities and two community colleges. Among other things, funds help educate and support pre-nursing and nursing students from disadvantaged backgrounds, including racial and ethnic minorities underrepresented among registered nurses.

The Nursing Workforce Diversity grants help aspiring nurses develop the academic skills to fulfill pre-entry requirements for nursing school and meet academic rigors after they enroll. Through the program, nursing students may receive tutoring, mentoring, career and personal counseling to help them stay in nursing school. Since many of the students come from economically disadvantaged backgrounds, with household incomes that meet federal low-income standards, they are eligible for stipends and scholarships.

In addition, several grant projects have identified students at the middle school orhigh school level to take partin summer enrichment programs on nursing school campuses or participate in job-shadowing in a clinical nursing setting. During the school year, the program helps enrolled youngsters establish Future Nurses Clubs, attend career fairs and weekend “nursing academies,” or receive tutoring to pass exams for college entry.

The Nursing Workforce Diversity grants supported 32,847 participants in FY 2007 through projects administered by schools of nursing, academic health centers, state and local governments, and other private or public organizations.

HRSA's Bureau of Health Professions administers most of the agency’s nursing grant programs, which are authorized under Title VIII of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act.

Tables of grantees follow:

Nursing Workforce Diversity, FY 2008

Organization

City

State

Amount

The University of Alabama at Birmingham

Birmingham

Ala.

$282,006.00

Tuskegee University

Tuskegee

Ala.

$445,462.00

Troy University

Troy

Ala.

$296,360.00

University of Hawaii

Honolulu

Hawaii

$319,248.00

University of Massachusetts Lowell

Lowell

Mass.

$263,583.00

Regents of the University of Michigan

Flint

Mich.

$378,275.00

The University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Charlotte

N.C.

$216,461.00

Community College of Allegheny County

Pittsburgh

Pa.

$322,147.00

SwVCC - Virginia Appalachian TriCollege Nursing Program

Richlands

Va.

$303,576.00

Total

 

 

$2,827,118.00


Nurse Education Practice and Retention Grants, FY 2008

Organization

City

State

Amount

The Healthcare Authority for Baptist Health

Montgomery

Ala.

$540,339.00

Arizona State University

Tempe

Ariz.

$332,038.00

Arizona State University

Tempe

Ariz.

$584,837.00

The Regents of the University of California, San Francisco

San Francisco

Calif.

$496,400.00

Kaiser Foundation Hospitals

Oakland

Calif.

$389,240.00

University of Florida

Gainesville

Fla.

$305,297.00

Eastern Illinois University

Charleston

Ill.

$173,534.00

Frontier School of Midwifery/Family Nurse

Hyden

Ky.

$238,150.00

University of Massachusetts Boston

Boston

Mass.

$281,399.00

University of Detroit Mercy

Detroit

Mich.

$369,869.00

Regents of the University of Michigan

Flint

Mich.

$348,117.00

College of St. Scholastica

Duluth

Minn.

$178,732.00

University of Mississippi Medical Center

Jackson

Miss.

$373,334.00

University of Southern Mississippi

Hattiesburg

Miss.

$153,757.00

The Curators of the University Of Missouri

Columbia

Mo.

$159,330.00

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Chapel Hill

N.C.

$344,356.00

Meridian Hospitals Corporation

Neptune

N.J.

$290,909.00

Thomas Edison State College

Trenton

N.J.

$236,591.00

Research Foundation of SUNY at Stony Brook

Stony Brook

N.Y.

$246,098.00

Board of Regents, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Las Vegas

Nev.

$245,885.00

East Central University

Ada

Okla.

$345,610.00

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

Oklahoma City

Okla.

$255,337.00

Pennsylvania State University

University Park

Pa.

$287,589.00

University Of The Incarnate Word

San Antonio

Texas

$335,915.00

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Houston

Texas

$272,300.00

Lamar University

Beaumont

Texas

$233,632.00

University of Texas Medical Branch

Galveston

Texas

$269,998.00

West Virginia University Research Corp.

Morgantown

W.Va.

$261,736.00

     

 

Total

 

 

$8,550,329.00

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HRSA, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is the federal agency charged with ensuring that quality medical care is available for the most vulnerable of Americans, without regard to their ability to pay.


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