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College of Nursing receives $1.36 million to enhance nursing care of veterans

The University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Nursing has received a grant designed to improve the health and well-being of military veterans.
 
The Health Resources Services Administration three-year grant for $1.36 million, will focus on recruiting more military veterans into the college’s bachelor’s degree in nursing program, provide pre-admission, as well as resources to facilitate student success. The grant also will educate nursing students and practicing nurses on the unique health needs of veterans and military members.
 
The grant, which began July 1, is focused on primary care nursing for chronic disease prevention and management, including mental health and substance use disorders.
 
“Military veterans and those who continue to serve have unique health care needs. Some of those needs are due to exposures, experiences, and injuries while serving,” said Louise LaFramboise, Ph.D., grant project director and associate professor of the UNMC College of Nursing. “They’ve done so much for us. This grant is about making their health a priority and addressing their unique needs.”
 
“We know there is a special bond, a camaraderie between those who’ve served in the military,” Dr. LaFramboise said. “There’s a belief that veteran nurses caring for veterans may be able to establish a quicker rapport of trust to address not just physical health issues, but mental health issues as well.”
 
Grant objectives include:
 

  • Partner with University of Nebraska campuses to develop early admission programs
  • Partner with the Veterans Administration of Nebraska and Western Iowa Health Care System to provide clinical opportunities that address issues unique to veterans
  • Create infrastructure at the college’s campuses in Omaha, Lincoln, Kearney, Scottsbluff and Norfolk to provide veteran nursing students with physical, emotional and environmental resources to facilitate successful program completion.
  • Develop a statewide pool of registered nurses and nursing faculty interested in learning more about caring for veterans through a continuing education program.
  • Expose undergraduate nursing students to a revised undergraduate curriculum that includes content about the unique health care needs of veterans in primary care settings.

The college’s early admission program will give student veterans enrolled in undergraduate colleges or universities who meet and maintain requirements a guaranteed spot in the UNMC College of Nursing. Traditionally, students apply only after completing a majority of the 58 credit hours of required prerequisite course work at an accredited university, college or community college.
 
Those eligible are military veterans and those currently serving in the military – active, reserve, or National Guard.
 
The grant team includes Cathrin Carithers, D.N.P., co-project director, Teresa Hultquist, Ph.D., Heidi Keeler, Ph.D., and Molly Belieu.
 
We are Nebraska Medicine and UNMCOur mission is to lead the world in transforming lives to create a healthy future for all individuals and communities through premier educational programs, innovative research and extraordinary patient care. 
 
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