D'Youville Awarded $400,000 Federal Nursing Grant
D'Youville Awarded $400,000 Federal Nursing Grant
announced today that D'Youville's Patricia H. Garman School of Nursing received a $401,442 grant from the during a press conference with D'Youville leadership held on the D'Youville campus.
The grant is a loan forgiveness incentive aimed at training qualified nurse educators in an effort to increase the number of nurses entering the workforce. Through this grant, the Patrician H. Garman School of Nursing can focus on recruitment and mentorship of nurses who aspire to nursing faculty roles. Reducing financial barriers to graduate education, this grant offers up to 85 percent loan forgiveness for nurses who pursue work as faculty. The College will use the resources to support twenty masters and eight doctoral students who commit to future teaching roles.
The director of the grant project is Dr. Denise Dunford, chair of D鈥橸ouville's graduate nursing programs, director of the Family Nurse Practitioner program, a nurse for over 40 years, a nurse practitioner for 25 years, and double board-certified as a family nurse practitioner and emergency nurse practitioner.
鈥淎n aging baby boomer population and retiring nursing workforce is driving the demand for new nurses; but we need qualified instructors willing to step up and train the next generation of nurses,鈥 said Higgins, who serves on the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health. 鈥淭his initiative, led by Dr. Dunford and D鈥橸ouville works to address those gaps and facilitate the supply of well-trained nurses into the healthcare delivery system right here in Western New York.鈥
鈥淥n behalf of the entire D鈥橸ouville community, I would like to extend my sincere gratitude and appreciation to Congressman Higgins for his support of our efforts to secure this important grant," said President Lorrie Clemo. "The Nurse Faculty Loan Program funding will allow D鈥橸ouville to bridge the nurse faculty gap in our Patricia H. Garman School of Nursing while supporting students who will make a commitment to becoming future teachers. This grant will further enhance D鈥橸ouville鈥檚 commitment as a leader in educating future leaders who will work to care for the population, especially the poor and vulnerable in our community.鈥
Jamel Perkins, D鈥橸ouville Board Chair added, 鈥淚 would like to congratulate D鈥橸ouville on receiving this grant. It is a real honor and will play an integral role in growing and improving our high-quality nursing program."
According to the , 鈥淓mployment of registered nurses is projected to grow 15 percent from 2016 to 2026, much faster than the average for all occupations鈥 creating a need for over 438,000 additional RNs by 2026. Yet, a 2016-17 report by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing found that 鈥渘ursing schools turned away over 64,000 qualified applicants from baccalaureate programs because of an insufficient number of faculty.鈥
The student population in the Patricia H. Garman School of Nursing is very diverse in terms of race and gender, establishing a pipeline for nursing faculty who are representative of the communities they serve. In addition, 91 percent of D鈥橸ouville nursing graduates report working at organizations in areas deemed medically underserved or economically depressed.