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Wednesday, May 1, 2024

UK colleges launch program to train more public-health nurses by getting nursing and public-health degrees in four and a half years

A University of Kentucky nursing class (UK photo)
By Jonathan Greene

University of Kentucky

One of the greatest challenges facing the state and the nation is the current and growing shortage of health professionals, particularly nurses.

A combined program from the University of Kentucky College of Public Health and the UK College of Nursing offers students a new pathway to make a difference in communities.

Through the Public Health Nursing Scholars program, students will earn two degrees – Bachelor of Public Health (BPH) and Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) – in just four and a half years.

“Having these two programs together shows how important it is to try to fix health issues on the front side as much as possible before people end up in the hospital. We need to intervene much sooner and try to make our communities healthier,” said Andrea Flinchum, manager of the Healthcare-Associated Infection/Antibiotic Resistance Prevention Program at the state Department for Public Health. “I love that I can impact a large group or a population with my knowledge and skills. This program is taking nursing to a larger scale, rather than one or two patients. Nurses play a key role in public health.”

Public-health nurses play key roles in preventing disease while promoting public safety and well-being. Public-health nurses promote better health and safety in communities and help prepare them for and recover from public health incidents, such as natural disasters and disease outbreaks.

“Public health is faced with existing and emerging complex health challenges: chronic conditions, infectious diseases and pandemics, traumatic injuries, and environmental hazards," said Heather Bush, dean of the College of Public Health.

“Effective solutions require bringing people, skills and expertise together. The Public Health Nursing Scholars Program is such a partnership,” Bush said. “Training at the intersection of our two colleges equips graduates to tackle emerging health needs on two fronts: delivering high-quality care to individuals while addressing upstream factors impacting health outcomes to ultimately build a more resilient health-care system.”

Rosalie Mainous, dean of the College of Nursing, said “Public health is the cornerstone of the work of the baccalaureate-prepared registered nurse. A partnership with the College of Public Health will now prepare practitioners that are uniquely qualified to blend the practice degree with one that is steeped in the evidence in genetics, the environment, and health policy to support healthy outcomes.”

A variety of agencies and industries are looking to hire people with a public-health nursing background.

Government and other public agencies hire public-health nurses, and job opportunities are available with agencies and organizations that serve the health needs of a community. Public-health nurses might work for a school system to educate students and their parents about hygiene and nutrition or work for a community clinic caring for individuals and promoting disease prevention.

Public-health nurses also work with nonprofit organizations like the Red Cross or smaller grassroots groups concerned about health, social justice, and education.

The Kentucky Nurses Association predicted a potential need for 20,000 nurses in the state by 2025. Across the country, the need for nurses is only continuing to grow with more than 300,000 additional nursing jobs expected by 2032. The median salary for nurses is $37.28 per hour or $77,500 per year.

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