About Frontier Nursing University

A group of Frontier Nursing University faculty and staff standing outside.

About

What started as a bold response to gaps in care more than a century ago has grown into a nationally recognized institution focused on educating the next generation of leaders in advanced practice nursing. 

Frontier Nursing University (FNU) began in 1925 as a group of nurses on horseback in the mountains of rural Kentucky. Today, FNU is one of the largest nonprofit universities in the United States dedicated to educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners. With distance education programs, supportive faculty, and community-based clinical learning, Frontier empowers students to advance their careers while continuing to practice in their home communities.  

Frontier graduates consistently exceed the national average in certification exam pass rates. Program options include the Master of Science in Nursing (MSN), Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), and Post-Graduate Certificate (PGC). Specialty tracks include Nurse-Midwifery, Family Nurse Practitioner, Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner, and Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner. 

What Sets Frontier Apart

Frontier Nursing University is committed to providing the resources and connections students need to thrive academically, professionally, and personally. Students benefit from personalized guidance from academic advisors, meaningful opportunities for peer collaboration, and a robust curriculum taught by passionate faculty.

Frontier graduates are prepared not only to deliver high-quality care, but also to lead. Our mission emphasizes developing competent, ethical, entrepreneurial, and compassionate clinicians who can improve health outcomes across a wide range of settings. From women’s health and family care to leadership, Frontier alumni carry forward a mission centered on service, excellence, and access.  

At Frontier, academic excellence is paired with a strong sense of community. The university’s Culture of Caring is built on five main elements: professionalism, inclusivity, respect, positive communication, and mutual support. This commitment shapes the student experience and exemplifies the caring behaviors we hope to bring to the wider healthcare system.

Frontier’s Strategic Plan

In 2024, Frontier Nursing University initiated a comprehensive and collaborative strategic planning process designed to advance its mission and vision in innovative and impactful ways. The Strategic Plan for 2030 is a five-year plan to optimize the success of students, faculty, and staff. Building upon a legacy established over the past century, the strategic planning initiative invites the FNU community to envision and shape a bold and transformative “Next Frontier.” 

Dr. Brooke A. Flinders Receives Trailblazer in Higher Education Award

FNU President Dr. Brooke A. Flinders was named a recipient of Insight Into Academia magazine’s 2026 Trailblazer in Higher Education Award in 2026. This national honor recognizes senior leaders whose bold, strategic innovations have advanced institutional excellence, strengthened community and connectedness, and created meaningful, measurable impact for students, employees, and the broader academic system. Read the full story here.

Frontier at a Glance

  • More than 100 years experience in nurse-midwifery and family care 
  • Oldest and largest continually operating nurse-midwifery education program in the U.S. 
  • First family nurse practitioner program in the country. 
  • Pioneered the first midwifery community-based distance education program in the U.S. in 1989. 
  • More than 12,000 alumni and 2,700 students representing every U.S. state. 
  • Recognized as a Great College to Work For for the fifth year in a row. 

FNU is recognized as a Great College to Work For in 2025 for the fifth year in a row. The Great Colleges to Work For program is one of the largest and most respected workplace-recognition programs in the country. FNU is a great place to work because of the outstanding people who are fully committed to our students and our mission.

FNU offers a wide range of resources to its students, faculty, and staff, including mental health resources, dedicated counseling services, and wellness initiatives.The Excellence in Mental Health and Well-Being Award is a measure of an institution’s individual programs and initiatives that significantly advance the core values of inclusive excellence and belonging.

FNU is a recipient of the 2025 Health Professions Higher Education Excellence and Distinction (HEED) Award from Insight Into Academia magazine. The annual Health Professions HEED Award is a national honor recognizing U.S. health colleges and universities that demonstrate an outstanding commitment to academic excellence, belonging, and community-building across all levels of campus life.

History

Frontier Nursing University was founded in 1925 by Mary Breckinridge. The nurses rode on horseback to bring healthcare to some of the most isolated and underserved communities in the country. Breckinridge’s pioneering work in rural Kentucky transformed care for mothers, babies, and families, and in 1939, she expanded that mission by establishing the Frontier Graduate School of Midwifery. In 2011, the school officially changed its name to Frontier Nursing University to better reflect its status as a graduate school of nursing.

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