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  • Courier Spotlight: Meet Our 2016 Couriers! (Part 2)

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, Couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community that are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality health care to underserved and rural populations.

     

    In 1928, Mary Breckinridge, founder of Frontier Nursing University, established the Courier Program, recruiting young people to come work in the Kentucky Mountains and learn about service to humanity. Couriers escorted guests safely through remote terrain, delivered medical supplies to remote outpost clinics, and helped nurse-midwives during home visits and births. Frontier has benefited tremendously from the tireless work of the over 1,500 Couriers who have served. This tradition and legacy continues to this day.

     

    Please join us in welcoming the 2016 Courier Class!

     

    Anthony Douglas II

    Anthony is from South Bend, Indiana, where his parents, Anthony and Rachel Douglas, raised him and his sister Paige. He is passionate about servant leadership and excited about working this summer as a Courier. He hopes to gain leadership skills and experience working on a team, and learn from people who are in the career field he intends to pursue.

     

    Anthony is a junior at Wabash College, an all-male institution in Crawfordsville, Indiana. He’s pursuing a degree in psychology with a biology/chemistry double minor. He is actively involved on campus and in intramural sports. Anthony spent the previous two summers taking summer school courses and working at Englishton Park, a camp that serves kids struggling with behavioral disorders. His career goal is to become a doctor.

     

    “FNU offers an amazing opportunity to experience new health care settings and work with healthcare professionals who provide care to underserved populations,” said Anthony. “I wanted an opportunity to develop skills that will help me succeed in medical school and be a better leader and well-rounded person.”

     

    Vaishu Jawahar

    Vaishu is a senior at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, majoring in biology and double minoring in public health and political science. In her free time, she enjoys running, keeping up with current events, eating wings, and cheering on the Tar Heels in basketball.

     

    Vaishu was born in Chennai, India, and her interest in combining medicine and public service comes from her heritage. Her grandparents were born in a rural village to a family of poor low-caste farmers. They overcame their obstacles through education and became doctors, lawyers, and civil rights activists and instilled the same duty of service in Vaishu. She has always loved being around hospitals because she grew up in her grandmother’s small private hospital. Her life changed when she saw the horrible conditions of an Indian government hospital. Since then, nothing has driven her more than the belief that every individual deserves access to quality healthcare.

     

    Vaishu wants to observe healthcare from every perspective possible to fully understand the problem. She has volunteered at suburban and urban hospitals and worked in labs in the pathway of drug development at the NIH. Vaishu has volunteered on grassroots campaigns to expand access to healthcare. However, she’s never had the chance to see the most medically underserved areas of the country. She looks forward to spending time in Appalachia to get to know the people and understand their needs. The rich tradition of service that Mary Breckinridge brought to Hyden is what encouraged Vaishu to apply for the Courier Program, knowing she would have much to learn from it. She looks forward to spending her summer in Kentucky and being a part of an important legacy.

     

    Justin Sim

    Justin is from San Diego, California. He is currently a sophomore at Williams College and plans to major in both biology and history with a focus on pre-med. He loves playing sports and is a member of the college football team. In his free time, Justin enjoys reading, listening and playing music, and watching movies.

     

    Justin decided to participate in the Courier Program this summer to immerse himself in an unknown environment and see how health care and life function in a rural part of the U.S. He greatly enjoys getting to know new faces and cultures and believes the Courier Program will help him achieve new perspectives as he progresses through his education and future career.

     

    Elleanna Wiering

    Elleanna is an art and literature loving person with a passion for science and heart for serving people in health care settings. She grew up in Minneapolis, Minnesota, before moving further north to her family’s hobby farm. Her family raises chickens and a few beef cattle. Elleanna is attending a nearby University in the city.

     

    Elleanna applied to the Courier Program to be immersed in a health care environment where she would learn to make important decisions. She knows that assessing someone’s health is difficult, and she is sometimes afraid to make decisions for fear of doing something wrong. She hopes the Courier Program will help her grow in this area.

     

    Elleanna is also looking forward to learning from others by listening, observing and actively doing what others before her have done. She is fascinated by the history of the Courier Program. Elleanna had learned about Mary Breckinridge some time ago in a class, but did not realize that the Courier Program was one of her legacies. When she made the connection, Elleanna had no doubt that she wanted to be a part of the program.

     

    Read about the new Couriers we featured earlier this summer here.

     

     

  • FNU announces new Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program

    The Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program will start January 2017, applications are due Oct. 10 for inaugural class.

     

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) announced today a new program for nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners seeking a post-master’s certificate in psychiatric-mental health nursing. The inaugural class will start January 2017. Applications are now being accepted and are due Oct. 10.

     

    Psychiatric-mental health nurses work with individuals, families and groups to assess mental health,diagnose and treat disorders, and ensure mental health care needs are being met. They work in a variety of health care settings including hospitals, primary care offices, mental health centers and government facilities.

     

    “As with many areas of nursing, there is a shortage of nurses who specialize in mental health, particularly in rural areas,” said Dr. Susan Stone, president of Frontier Nursing University. “Our goal is to improve access to care by educating and offering advanced degrees to more nurses. It’s important to focus on both body and mind as we work to achieve better health and wellness for underserved women and families.”

     

    Frontier Nursing University’s inaugural psychiatric-mental health track, launching in January 2017, is being offered as a post-master’s certificate for nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners who have a master’s degree and are seeking an additional specialty certification. Starting in January 2018, FNU will admit qualified applicants seeking a Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) into the psychiatric-mental health program. All students will also have the option to complete a companion Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree.

     

    FNU coursework is offered online and clinical rotations are completed in the student’s home community. There are two required on-campus sessions: an orientation called Frontier Bound that will take place in Hyden, Ky., Dec 8-11, 2016, for the inaugural class, and a five-day on-campus skills intensive experience called Clinical Bound that will take place prior to clinical rotations.

     

    The psychiatric-mental health program will admit students four times a year. Application deadlines and admissions requirements are available at Frontier.edu.  

     
  • Alumni Spotlight: Army Col. Michelle Munroe, RN, CNM, DNP

     

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, Couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community that are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality health care to underserved and rural populations.

     

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) is proud to have alumni that are not only using their passions and skills to serve the underprivileged, but also their nation. FNU graduate Michelle Munroe, RN, CNM, DNP chose FNU to continue her education and pursue a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree while retaining her work in the U.S. Army.

     

    Michelle’s work in the medical field began in Texas in 1992 at the Brooke Army Medical Center where she served as a nurse. After working her way up to an Emergency Nurse at the Darnall Army Medical Center and working in Labor & Delivery, she decided to pursue a degree in Nurse-Midwifery, which she obtained from the University of Maryland Baltimore in 2003.

     

    As a Certified Nurse-Midwife, MIchelle soon landed a job on the Hawaiian Islands as Midwifery Chief at Tripler Army Medical Center. From there she worked in the OB/GYN Department at the Madigan Army Medical Center before spending a few years as a Deputy Commander for Nursing.

     

    In 2009, Michelle was named the Daughters of the American Revolution Anita Newcomb McGee/“U.S. Army Nurse of the Year” (go here for details).

     

    In 2012 Michelle began working in her current position as the Commandant and Assistant Dean for Student Affairs at the Uniformed Services University in Bethesda, MD. She chose to continue her education at FNU beginning in 2013, graduating 15 months later with a Doctor of Nursing Practice.  She also works as an Assistant Professor at Daniel K. Inouye Graduate School of Nursing.

     

    “FNU has a rich history and it was great to learn and experience it from a personal perspective as a student both on and off campus,” said Michelle.


    According to the FNU grad, the University’s rolling-start admission process as well as the distance-learning model made it possible for her to continue her work while pursuing her degree.

     

    Thank you, Michelle, for serving our nation and making our community at FNU proud!

  • 2016 ACNM Annual Conference Recap

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) attended the American College of Nurse Midwives (ACNM) 61st annual conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico on May 21-26th. At the conference nurse-midwives and other women’s health care experts convened to discuss ways to enhance quality of care and expand impact even further into mainstream care for women across the nation.

     

    The meeting also celebrated the rich history of nurse-midwifery and called on nurse-midwives to channel their strengths in new, more effective and more diverse ways in order to enhance the health care of women throughout the lifespan.

     

    FNU EXHIBIT BOOTH

    FNU’s exhibit booth at the conference was a busy place for interacting with students, graduates, faculty, staff, preceptors, supporters and friends. In celebration of Kitty Ernst’s 90th birthday in July, FNU decided to “Paint the Conference Purple” in her honor. Participants were able to take photos in a  photobooth and post to their social media outlets to wish Kitty a happy birthday. Along with the photobooth FNU also had purple manicure sets available for a donation and also offered a variety of ways that people could donate to the Kitty Ernst Chair of Midwifery.  

     

    ANNUAL RECEPTION

    The birthday celebration for Kitty Ernst continued with FNU’s annual reception. This year more than 170 attendees enjoyed an evening of mingling, networking and sharing stories. The reception included party favors and decorations, and a special video message in honor of Kitty’s birthday. The evening closed with the presentation of a birthday cake, complete with candles, and singing Happy Birthday to Kitty. Many memories were shared, tears shed and laughs enjoyed as we honored this special woman.

     

    STUDENT AMBASSADORS

    FNU’s Diversity PRIDE Program was proud to host an ambassador essay contest that would send two students with an all expenses covered trip to the ACNM Annual Meeting. Congratulations to the two PRIDE student essay winners: Ximena Rossato-Bennett and Michelle Gragg. These students had the opportunity to attend many education sessions as well as the Midwives of Color Committee (MOCC) reception at the conference. They also had the opportunity to network with other midwives at the booth during the exhibit hours they were not in sessions. The students even shared their favorite parts of the conference with a video post: 

     

     

    KEYNOTE SPONSOR

    FNU was also pleased to sponsor the keynote closing reception on Thursday, May 26 in which Christy Turlington-Burns, founder of the non-profit organization Every Mother Counts, presented on maternal health challenges with Dr. Cara Osborne, CNM, MSN, ScD. Having endured a childbirth complication herself, Burns was compelled to direct and produce the documentary, No Woman, No Cry about maternal health challenges that impact the lives of millions of girls and women around the world.

     

    AWARDS AND RECOGNITION

    FNU is proud to announce that we had many faculty members and alumni receive awards and present sessions and posters during the ACNM conference.

     

    We would like to extend a special congratulations to the following ACNM Fellow inductees:

    • Tonya Nicholson – Inducted as new ACNM Fellow

    • Rebeca Barroso – Inducted as new ACNM Fellow

    • Julie Paul – Inducted as a new ACNM Fellow

     

    Congratulations to the following faculty members for their recognition:

    • Kim Baraona – ACNM Teaching Excellence Award

    • Katie Moriarty – ACNM Board Member, Region Representative

     

    FNU also had two alumni receive awards:

    • Holly Kennedy – Hattie Hemschemeyer Award

    • Maj Elizabeth Nutter – Kitty Ernst Award

     

    Thank you to the following faculty members who presented workshops, sessions or posters at ACNM:

     

    • Vicki Burslem

    • Judith Butler

    • Rebecca Fay

    • Diana Jolles

    • Katie Moriarty

    • Tanya Tanner

    • Susan Yount

     

    View photos from our exhibit booth and reception here: FNU Photos at 2016 ACNM Conference.

  • Courier Spotlight: Meet Our 2016 Couriers! (Part 1 of 2)

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, Couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community that are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality health care to underserved and rural populations.

     

    In 1928, Mary Breckinridge, founder of Frontier Nursing University, established the Courier Program, recruiting young people to come work in the Kentucky Mountains and learn about service to humanity. Couriers escorted guests safely through remote terrain, delivered medical supplies to remote outpost clinics, and helped nurse-midwives during home visits and births. Frontier has benefited tremendously from the tireless work of the over 1,500 Couriers who have served. This tradition and legacy continues to this day.

     

    This month and next, we’ll be introducing you to the 2016 Courier Class. Please join us in welcoming our newest Couriers!

     

    Jonathan K. Allotey

    Jonathan is from the beautiful coastal country of Ghana in West Africa. He came to the U.S. four years ago to pursue a degree in biochemistry and graduated in May 2015 from the College of Wooster in Ohio.

     

    Jonathan grew up in the capital city of Accra, a major business hub with about 8 million residents. His mother raised him and his younger sister. Like a typical West African family, Jonathan’s grandparents played a significant role in his upbringing. They shared stories and poems with him that emphasized the value of community, relationships and faith.

     

    Jonathan applied to the Courier Program because he wanted an opportunity to contribute to the work of health and social organizations in rural and underserved communities.

     

    “My goal is to work as a Family Nurse Practitioner in a rural community, and the Courier Program offered me that opportunity,” said Jonathan. “I also want to learn firsthand how nursing and primary healthcare is administered in underserved areas with few resources.”

     

    Julian Butler

    Julian is from Johns Creek, Georgia, about 30 minutes north of Atlanta. He’s a junior studying biology with a double minor in healthcare studies and chemistry at the University of Richmond in Virginia.

     

    In his free time, Julian enjoys hanging out with friends, volunteering at a hospital, and relaxing and reading. He joined the Courier Program because he wanted to experience medical practices in a rural environment. He’s interested in becoming a family doctor and through research, he has discovered that family doctors have more responsibility for their patients in a rural environment.

     

    “The Courier Program will provide me with an understanding of rural medicine and help me decide whether or not I want to practice medicine in a rural setting long-term,” said Julian. “I cannot wait to meet the other Courier volunteers and work to better the community I serve!”

     

    May Congdon

    May is from San Francisco, California, and is finishing her junior year at Williams College in rural Massachusetts. She chose Williams to pursue her dream of seeing snowy winters and completing pre-med requirements.

     

    She succeeded in experiencing a new climate, but decided to put pre-med on hold in order to major in Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies. She’s considering nursing school after graduation, hopefully closer to the West Coast. She loves to sing (she’s in an acappella group at school, the Williams College Accidentals), read, cook, and explore the outdoors through hiking and river rafting.

     

    She chose to participate in the Courier Program because she’s interested in nursing and to learn more about a part of the United States she knows very little about.

     

    “Many of my peers chose to study abroad in other countries, but I think it is also, if not more, important, to learn about our own country and engage in service of communities closer to home,” said May. “It will be an honor to live in the Hyden area this summer, and to meet the other Couriers and observe rural Appalachian healthcare. Thanks so much for having me!”

     
  • Dr. Susan Stone Receives Outstanding Alumnus Award

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) is proud to announce that our president, Dr. Susan Stone, recently received The University of Tennessee (UT) College of Nursing Outstanding Alumnus Award. The Outstanding Alumnus Award was presented in recognition of Dr. Stone’s contributions to the nursing profession. It is the most prestigious award given by the UT College of Nursing Alumni Association.

     

    The award was presented on Friday, May 6 at the UT College of Nursing Alumni Awards Luncheon. The following words were read in honor of Dr. Stone:

     

    “For the past 15 years Susan Stone has served as the President of Frontier Nursing University. Under her leadership, the University moved from a very small school (with an enrollment of about 200) educating certificate prepared nurse-midwives to a fully accredited, independent, single purpose university offering the MSN and DNP degrees with specialties in nurse-midwifery, family nursing, women’s health and psychiatric nursing. The University is a non-profit, private university founded within the vision of Mary Breckinridge, a pioneer in health care. Currently, over 1600 students are enrolled at the University and graduates are in every state in the U.S. and seven foreign countries. The programs are delivered through a combination of distance learning courses, on campus sessions and experience in clinical sites around the country. Dr. Stone has kept the university on a path of commitment to the mission of educating nurses to serve in rural and underserved areas. The majority of students and alumni live and serve in rural and/or medically underserved areas.

     

    Dr. Stone began her career as an obstetrical nurse and quickly realized that she could impact care in a more meaningful way by becoming a certified nurse-midwife. She practiced full scope midwifery care from 1991 through 1998. During this time, she precepted nurse-midwifery students and developed outreach clinical education sites for nurse-midwifery students in Upstate New York. Believing that having more nurse-midwives would ultimately serve the goal of safer, more satisfying birth experiences for women, she shifted her focus to the education of nurse-midwives. She relocated to Kentucky and served as the Program Director of Frontier Nursing University’s nurse-midwifery education program.

     

    In 1999, she realized that more education would help her attain her goals and she enrolled in the DNS program at University of Tennessee Health Science Center. This education propelled her career forward as a leader. Shortly after graduating she was appointed as President of FNU. Dr. Stone leads Frontier Nursing University with a goal of improving healthcare through increasing the number and quality of nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to serve mothers and babies and the families who care for them. Please join me in congratulating our 2016 Outstanding Alumna, Dr. Susan Stone.”

    Congrats, Dr. Stone!  Frontier Nursing University is honored to be under your leadership!

  • Staff Spotlight: Beulah Couch

     

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, Couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community that are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality health care to underserved and rural populations.

     

    Beulah Couch is a human resources and site manager at Frontier Nursing University’s Hyden campus. Born and raised in the area, Beulah worked in the Mary Breckinridge Hospital near Frontier Nursing Service (as the school was known then) as a teenager. Midwifery attended births were the norm in her family. Her grandmothers had their babies at home, and her mother was named Sinclair after the midwife who assisted with her birth.

     

    After she graduated, Beulah became an admissions clerk at the hospital. She spent a lot of time in the OB unit, so she knew exactly where she wanted to go when she was ready to have babies of her own. Mona Lyndon was a midwifery student completing her clinicals when Beulah had her baby in 1977. Beulah shared the following about Mona:

     

    “She listened to the baby’s very first heartbeats and measured my stomach to see how much the baby had grown between visits. She counseled me when I gained too much weight and told me that breastfeeding was the healthier option when it wasn’t the cool thing to do. When my baby decided to arrive early, Mona was out of town. The next day, she held her and cried as she kissed her on the cheek.”

     

    Mona had followed Beulah throughout her pregnancy, and Beulah often wondered where her career had taken her. Thirty-eight years later, Beulah found Mona Lydon Rochelle featured in FNU’s Quarterly Bulletin:

     

    “After graduating as a certified nurse-midwife, Mona moved for a short time to the northeast, but ended up in 1979 in New Mexico, where she worked at a birth center for two years. She moved to Boston with her husband so that he could attend Harvard Law School. They returned to New Mexico for eight years where Mona practiced clinical midwifery. In 1994, they moved to Washington where Mona earned a Master’s of Public Health and PhD in epidemiology. She graduated in 1999 and joined the faculty at University of Washington the following year.”

     

    Read the full article here.

     

    After her children started school, Beulah began working at Frontier Nursing Service. She worked for 17 years at Wendover where she explored everything about Mary Breckinridge, from the attic in her log home to the springs that fed the huge stone cisterns on the mountain behind the Big House. She ate mulberries from the trees and read the historical Quarterly Bulletins in the attic of the garden house.  

     

    As a Hyden native, Beulah says that FNU has become part of who she is. “I think I have interacted with every employee that has worked here for the last 22 years. I’m thankful that I am part of the team who helps get these wonderful folks on board so they can continue the mission for women and families throughout the world. I love this place!”

    We are fortunate to have dedicated staff members like Beulah as part of the FNU community.

  • Student Spotlight: Cydne Marckmann, NP

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, Couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community that are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality health care to underserved and rural populations.

     

    According to Frontier Nursing University (FNU) student, Cydne Marckmann, FNU is the perfect fit to align with her passion for nursing. Cydne chose FNU because of the mission of Mary Breckinridge as well as the attractiveness of an online program. According to Cydne, everyone at FNU is intentionally connected and uses technology as a natural extension to bring each other together rather than as a barrier to separate one another.

     

    “My classmates have been the glue through tough coursework,” said Cydne. “Many are the last I hear from at night and the first I hear from in the morning. We live all over the U.S. but are only one text message away. The bond between us is incredible”

     

    Cydne is currently finishing up her Post-Master’s Doctors of Nursing Practice (PM-DNP) and is set to graduate in December of 2016.

     

    “I want to complete my DNP because I want nursing to be involved in the evolution of healthcare,” said Cydne. “If nursing is going to be actively involved, nurses need to have the same credentials and expertise as our other health care colleagues. The DNP has expanded my expertise in research, the business of healthcare, and the need for quality population outcomes. I’m gaining the skills to be a better nurse practitioner and to lead other nurse practitioners in our changing healthcare environment.”

     

    Although the DNP road has been an incredible journey, Cydne doesn’t consider it to have been an easy one. Cydne credits the faculty at Frontier for supporting her work and learning.

     

    She recently completed a grant project titled Telemedicine as a quality initiative for Concussion Management: A Washington State Pilot Project, which was approved by the 2016 American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) Research Grant. Her project focuses on concussions in sports as they continue to be on the rise. With little resources to help patients and providers manage concussions, patients often have to travel and wait a long time for an appointment with a specialist. Cydne proposes using telemedicine so that the primary care provider, patient, family, and specialist can work together in the same setting.

     

    The faculty at FNU is proud to have students like Cydne who are working hard to make our health care system stronger!

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