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Texas Staffing Shortage Shuts Down Rural Labor and Delivery Units

Texas Staffing Shortage Shuts Down Rural Labor and Delivery Units

Cuts to services

Transferring to larger hospitals

Vaccine misinformation impacts staff, patients

University of Texas at Tyler Announces New Mental Health Nurse Practitioner Program to Address Critical Need in State

University of Texas at Tyler Announces New Mental Health Nurse Practitioner Program to Address Critical Need in State

The University of Texas at Tyler (UT Tyler) College of Nursing and Health Sciences has announced a new mental health nurse practitioner program aimed at addressing the mental health challenges in Texas. The Master of Science in Nursing–Psychiatric/Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) Program was recently approved by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.

The new program will be offered primarily online with facilitation of clinical experiences taking place in students’ local communities. Program curriculum will highlight telehealth, mobile medical clinic management and disaster management, and provide rural health clinic opportunities so students can effectively prepare to meet the healthcare needs of vulnerable populations with limited resources.

Dr. Yong “Tai” Wang, UT Tyler College of Nursing and Health Sciences dean, tells jacksonvilleprogress.com , “As has been well documented, forecasts are predicting significant increases in psychiatric/mental health care needs. Rural areas will be even more at risk due to the misdistribution of health providers who choose to live and work in urban locations. The Master of Science in Nursing-Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner degree will meet a crucial need in East Texas and the state.”

The PMHNP program will prepare students to diagnose and treat common psychiatric disorders across the lifespan and offer short-term psychotherapy. Graduates will have advanced physical assessment skills, including being able to administer prescriptive psychotropic medications, psychotherapy, crisis intervention, case management, and consultation.

With more than 500,000 Texans suffering from serious and persistent mental illness and one in five Texans experiencing a mental health condition each year, the PMHNP degree is uniquely prepared to bridge the gap between physical and mental health care.

To learn more about the new mental health nurse practitioner program being offered at UT Tyler to address a critical need in the state, visit here.  

UT Tyler Expands Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program to Address Nursing Shortage

UT Tyler Expands Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program to Address Nursing Shortage

The University of Texas (UT) at Tyler recently announced that it will be expanding its Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program to accept more students in an effort to address the shortage of nurses in Texas and beyond.

From 2011-2018, the School of Nursing admitted 2,116 students while turning away 2,361 qualified applicants due to a lack of space and faculty. The expansion of the BSN program will allow for an additional 180 students to be admitted each academic year and will also accelerate the rate at which the program produces nurses into the workforce.

Dr. Barbara Haas, School of Nursing executive director, tells news-journal.com, “With the expansion, students will graduate an entire semester earlier than was possible under the previous model. Not only will we be able to accept more applicants, but we will also get them out into the workforce faster.”

Beginning in spring 2020, the program will offer a 12-month, year-round BSN program which will be made up of three 15-week semesters. Applicants will be admitted in the fall, spring, and summer semesters, and attend full-time for four consecutive semesters.

To learn more about UT Tyler’s announcement to expand its Bachelor of Science in Nursing program to accept more students in an effort to address the shortage of nurses in Texas and beyond, visit here.

Nurse of the Week: First-Generation Community Health Worker Maria Elena Valdez Prepares for Nursing Career

Nurse of the Week: First-Generation Community Health Worker Maria Elena Valdez Prepares for Nursing Career

Our Nurse of the Week is Maria Elena Valdez , a first-generation community health worker who is preparing to graduate from nursing school at the end of this year and embark on her career as a nurse.

Valdez was born in Eagle Pass, Texas to seasonal immigrant workers from Coahulla, Mexico. She traveled between Mexico and the US with her parents when she was young while her father worked in Wisconsin fields in the summers and then took his family to Mexico each winter when the work season ended. Her parents had a better plan for her future so they eventually settled in San Antonio, which now feels like home to Valdez.

During her junior of high school, Valdez started volunteering for the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) Pathway to Health Professions program, which is housed under the Policy Studies Center within the UTSA College of Public Policy. She earned her associate’s degree from Northeast Lakeview College and enrolled at UTSA in fall 2017 where she studied to earn her certification as a community health worker. She can now practice in the field while she works to obtain her bachelor’s degree.

Valdez is currently leveraging her Community Health Worker certification at the Children’s Hospital of San Antonio where she counsels emergency room patients so that they leave the hospital with better awareness of the resources available to them at home. She will graduate from UTSA in December with her Bachelor’s of Science in Community Health from the College of Education and Human Development.

Miguel Bedolla, the director of the UTSA Health Career Opportunity Program, tells utsa.edu, “Maria Elena is absolutely committed to serving the population of San Antonio, she has already been certified by the State of Texas as a Community Health Worker through the Pathways to Health Professions Program, she is one of the best students in the program and is unwaveringly committed to be an excellent nursing professional.”

To learn more about Maria Elena Valdez, a first-generation community health worker who is preparing to graduate from nursing school at the end of this year and embark on her career as a nurse, visit here

Nurse of the Week: Emergency Room Nurse Roseanna Fulton Demonstrates Importance of Community Through Donating Blood

Nurse of the Week: Emergency Room Nurse Roseanna Fulton Demonstrates Importance of Community Through Donating Blood

Our Nurse of the Week is Roseanna Fulton , an emergency room nurse at Ascension Seton Hays in Hays County, Texas, who has demonstrated the importance of community through giving blood.

When Fulton started nursing school, she thought she would eventually work in a labor and delivery department, but later found that she loved the emergency department due to its fast pace and the way it allowed her to help the community. She graduated nursing school in 2017.

Since becoming a nurse, Fulton has become a regular blood and platelet donor. Platelets are a type of blood cell that allow the body to form clots to help control bleeding. According to the Central Texas blood bank We Are Blood, burn victims, premature babies, organ transplant recipients, trauma victims, and cancer patients are the primary demographics in need of platelet transfusions. 

Fulton tells communityimpact.com, “I decided to become a regular donor because I feel like doing community work is really important. Working in the emergency department, I actually see the products that are donated being given to patients. I can see the immediate benefits of donating.”

Blood banks are in need of a steady supply of donations, especially platelets, because platelets have a shelf life of just five days and cannot be stockpiled the way that blood donations can. Platelet donations take between 70 minutes and two hours, as opposed to 45-60 minutes for regular blood donations. Only 47% of the US population is eligible to donate based on their blood type. 

For Fulton, multi-tasking by reading guilt-free during a blood donation satisfies her desire to relax while also helping people in her community in her time off. She calls it a win-win!

To learn more about Roseanna Fulton, an emergency room nurse in Texas who has demonstrated the importance of community through giving blood, visit here