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  • Featured Preceptor: Bailey Desin, PMHNP, provides students with a unique psychiatric clinical experience

    Featured Preceptor: Bailey Desin, PMHNP, provides students with a unique psychiatric clinical experience

    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 who are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality healthcare to underserved and rural populations.

    Frontier Nursing University graduate Bailey Desin, PMHNP, FNP, has been instrumental in helping FNU students grow into confident and skilled practitioners. Working at Mission Health’s Sweeten Creek Mental Health and Wellness Center in Asheville, North Carolina, Desin regularly precepts students in a demanding psychiatric setting, providing them with invaluable hands-on experience in both acute and outpatient care.

    Desin is the first psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner (PMHNP) to work in this acute environment at Mission Hospital, where she primarily manages the acute stabilization unit and covers various other units as needed. Her adaptability, willingness to mentor, and focus on patient-centered care make her an essential part of her team.

    Desin has already precepted five Frontier students, demonstrating her dedication to paying it forward by investing in the next generation of nurse practitioners. Her passion for supporting students extends beyond clinical teaching—she seeks to instill confidence and practical skills that they can carry forward into their careers.

    Desin earned a Master of Science in Nursing in Frontier’s Family Nurse Practitioner program, followed by a post-graduate certificate with a psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner specialization. She also holds a Master’s in Nursing Education, emphasizing her commitment to continuous learning and professional development.

    “Offering students a clinical experience is rewarding and helps maintain up-to-date practice,” she said. “I like to give back to my alma mater and provide students with a unique psychiatric clinical experience.”

    FNU student Eric Dunn said Desin’s enthusiasm for her alma mater, coupled with her willingness to take on challenging roles, underscores her dedication to advancing the NP profession.

    “Bailey has been wonderful to work with and I’ve learned so much from our time together,” Dunn said. “She’s also enthusiastic about being a Frontier alum and precepting its students.”

    Thank you, Bailey,  for your invaluable contributions as a preceptor, mentor and compassionate provider in your community.

    To read about previously recognized preceptors or to nominate a preceptor, click here.

    Are you interested in becoming a Frontier preceptor? Learn more here.

  • FNU Celebrates the Power of Rural on National Rural Health Day, Nov. 21

    FNU Celebrates the Power of Rural on National Rural Health Day, Nov. 21

    On Thursday, November 21, Frontier Nursing University will join healthcare providers and organizations across the country to celebrate National Rural Health Day (NRHD). Organized by the National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health, NRHD is an opportunity to bring awareness to the unique challenges that rural communities face and the efforts of rural healthcare providers to create positive change in these regions.

    Founded in the Appalachian area of Kentucky, Frontier’s mission is to provide accessible nurse-midwifery and nurse practitioner education to prepare competent, entrepreneurial, ethical, and compassionate leaders in primary care to serve all individuals with an emphasis on women and families in diverse, rural, and underserved populations. Today, 75 percent of FNU students live and complete their clinics in rural or underserved areas throughout the United States.

    Throughout the year, FNU shares inspiring stories on its blog about the impact alumni, students and preceptors have on the populations they serve. As we celebrate NRHD, here are two recent stories about the dedication of the Frontier community to serving rural populations:

    Alumni Spotlight: Dr. Rachel Koransky-Matson Makes a Difference for Diabetes Patients in Rural Maine

    Within her community in rural Maine, Frontier Nursing University alumnus Dr. Rachel Koransky-Matson stands as a beacon of transformative healthcare, especially for those affected by diabetes. Graduating as a Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) in 2016 and completing her Post-Master’s Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) in 2017, Dr. Koransky-Matson said her journey began with a resounding desire to make a difference which led her to FNU.

    “Frontier’s mission statement and vision to provide care for underserved communities and create entrepreneurial leaders is what I want to do with my career,” she said. Read more…

    Student Spotlight: Jameisha McCullough takes advantage of FNU’s POMP program to attend Annual Rural Health Conference

    While Jameisha McCullough, RN, BSN, is busy pursuing a Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) in Frontier Nursing University’s Family Nurse Practitioner program, she was excited to take advantage of the professional development opportunities available to her as a Frontier student.

    A resident of North Carolina, McCullough brings a wealth of experience in nursing and healthcare management, often working with rural populations. She said her career choice is deeply rooted in her natural passion for helping families gain access to quality healthcare.

    “It was an innate ability placed in me by God,” she shared. “I love helping individuals and for them to have the necessities to have good, quality health.” Read more…

    Join us in celebrating the value of rural communities and help shine a light on the health disparities facing these regions by sharing information about NRHD with your friends, colleagues, and social media followers. Visit the NRHD site to find ideas and resources.

    NOSORH founded NRHD in 2011 to showcase the efforts of individuals and organizations going the extra mile to address the unique healthcare needs of rural communities. National Rural Health Day is an annual day of recognition which occurs on the third Thursday of November.

  • Frontier to host 2025 Alumni and Friends Cruise – Info Session on Nov. 14

    Frontier to host 2025 Alumni and Friends Cruise – Info Session on Nov. 14

    In 2025, Frontier Nursing University honors and celebrates 100 years of healthcare service and education since our inception as Frontier Nursing Service in 1925. To celebrate, FNU will set sail in April on an unforgettable adventure on the 2025 Alumni and Friends Cruise.

    Open to FNU graduates, students, employees, and friends, participants will take part in a Bahamas & Perfect Day Cruise aboard Royal Caribbean’s Utopia of the Seas. The three-night cruise will depart from Port Canaveral in Orlando, Florida on April 18, 2025, and will include visits to Nassau and CocoCay in the Bahamas. 

    The cruise will also feature a special sailaway party reception hosted by FNU, an alumni meetup at Captain Jack’s Bar on Cococay Island, a sail and reef snorkeling excursion in Nassau, and a CE Session with Dr. Kevin Scalf entitled “Examining Self-Care: A Necessary Ingredient for Success.”

    This trip is a great opportunity to connect and network with others in the FNU community. You will also have an exclusive opportunity to meet with FNU’s President, Dr. Brooke Flinders.

    For those interested in setting sail, an information session will take place Nov. 14 at noon EST via Zoom. The session will include information on itinerary highlights, along with on-board activities and exclusive alumni experiences. During the session, one lucky attendee will have the chance to win a fully paid cruise fare.

    To register for the information session, click here. To learn more about the 2025 Alumni and Friends Cruise, click here.  

    To secure your cabin, please contact The Blue Team @ The Cruise Web:
    BlueTeam@cruiseweb.com
    1-276-235-6004
    www.cruiseweb.com

  • Celebrate National Nurse Practitioner Week with Free CE Courses and More

    Celebrate National Nurse Practitioner Week with Free CE Courses and More

    Happy National Nurse Practitioner Week! Frontier Nursing University is celebrating by hosting an exciting virtual event dedicated to nurse practitioners. During Empower 2024, we are releasing two free CE courses:

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    Also Available!

    Celebrate Veterans Day with this self-paced module that will guide you through understanding military culture, service-connected health concerns, and developing a plan of care utilizing military service benefits. For any clinician that wants to increase their understanding and improve the care they provide to this special patient population. Earn five CE credit hours with this $99 course.

    This National Nurse Practitioner Week, connect with Frontier faculty, students, alumni and friends in celebration of nurse practitioners! Learn more and stay up-to-date at Frontier.edu/NPWeek.

    SIGN UP FOR UPDATES

    To learn more about FNU’s distance education degrees and specialty tracks, please visit Degrees & Specialties.

  • Graduate Spotlight: Sherry Call meets two fellow Frontier graduates in Iraq

    Graduate Spotlight: Sherry Call meets two fellow Frontier graduates in Iraq

    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.

    Graduates of FNU can be found worldwide, making significant contributions to patient care wherever they go. This was recently made apparent to Sherry Call, MSN CNM ARNP, an FNU graduate who earned her MSN in Nurse-Midwifery in 2022.

    In January, Call had a unique opportunity to connect with fellow FNU graduates during a trip to Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, for the grand opening of the Nursing and Midwifery Development Centre (NMDC). This charitable organization is dedicated to advancing nursing and midwifery in the Middle East through continuing professional development activities, projects, research, advocacy, and advisory services. NMDC provides resources for nurses, midwives, educators, managers, and students, alongside development projects and research initiatives.

    In addition to attending the grand opening of the facility, Call spent time with FNU alumni during the first-ever International Nursing and Midwifery Conference in Iraq. The event was organized in partnership with NMDC, the College of Nursing/Hawler Medical University, TIU, and the Ministry of Health. Bringing regional and international nurses and midwives together, the main objective of the conference was to improve healthcare through the development of nursing and midwifery professions.

    During the conference, Call co-facilitated a class on Respectful Communication in Midwifery with fellow FNU graduate Camille Hatton, who graduated in 2015. Hatton and her family have been living in Kurdistan for the past six years, and she is now working at the NMDC to provide training to nurses and midwives in the region. Joining them in the class was Steffaney Thomas, another FNU graduate who has worked in Kurdistan since moving there after her graduation in 2020.

    Back in the U.S., Call serves as a CNM at Desert Sky Women’s Healthcare in her home community of Kennewick, Washington, providing obstetrical and gynecological care. She has extensive experience teaching Childbirth Education Classes, working on the OB floor as a Labor, Delivery, Recovery, and Postpartum nurse, and working in an outpatient women’s clinic as a nurse.

    Reflecting on her time spent with fellow FNU graduates in Kurdistan, Call believes that their interactions exemplify the global impact FNU has on healthcare.

    “I thought it was pretty cool to meet two fellow alumni halfway around the world,” she said. “I think it speaks well for Frontier. It is providing training to women who really want to make a difference in the world.”

    Thank you, Sherry, for exemplifying the spirit of FNU by making a difference not only in your local community but also in communities thousands of miles away.

    To read more alumni stories, visit the FNU Alumni stories page.

    Learn more about advanced nursing degrees and specialties at Frontier Nursing University. Subscribe to our blog for the latest news and events at FNU and to get inspired with stories featuring our alumni, students, faculty, preceptors and staff!

  • 2024 Distinguished Service to Alma Mater Award Recipient: Dr. Tia Andrighetti

    2024 Distinguished Service to Alma Mater Award Recipient: Dr. Tia Andrighetti

    The Distinguished Service to Alma Mater honors an alumnus who has continued to provide support to Frontier through volunteer efforts and/or philanthropy. The 2024 recipient is Dr. Tia Andrighetti, CNM, APRN, CHSE-A, CNE, FACNM.

    It is hard to imagine Dr. Tia Andrighetti, DNP, CNM, APRN, CHSE-A, CNE, FACNM, being anywhere but at Frontier Nursing University, where she has been a fixture for 20 years in a variety of capacities. But Andrighetti actually started as a pre-med student at Penn State University, planning to become an orthopedic surgeon.

    “I was pre-med until I took calculus with the engineers,” said Andrighetti, who grew up in Connecticut the daughter of a nurse. “Let me tell you, I never worked so hard to pass a class in my life.”

    But make no mistake, it wasn’t a lack of ability to pass the courses, but the number of years that lay ahead. Andrighetti met her future husband at Penn State and they were both eager to start their careers and their lives together. Andrighetti turned to nursing, and the rest is history. She went on to earn her BSN at Penn State.

    “I found Frontier during my maternity rotation,” Andrighetti said. “I did a rotation with one of the original Frontier midwives and was just in awe of her. She was amazing, and I said, ‘Oh, I want to be a midwife!’ Everything she did with the education of patients and the empowerment of patients resonated with me. I said I only want to be a midwife, and I only want to be a Frontier midwife.”

    Andrighetti obtained her MSN through Case Western Reserve University in 1997 while working toward her CNM at Frontier at the same time. During her clinical rotations, she lived with her grandparents to finish her clinical rotations.

    “I chose a community hospital to do my clinicals because I wasn’t quite comfortable enough to go out of hospital, but I knew I wanted to be where clients were more empowered and a little bit lower risk for midwifery care,” Andrighetti said. “I did my clinicals there for quite a while until my midwife was let go. Then I worked with my RCF (regional clinical faculty), Betty Bradberry, who was one of the original Frontier midwives. She was able to find me a clinical site in a Federally Qualified Health Center. I worked with the gamut of patients and had a wonderful experience with those midwives doing birth in the local hospital.” While most of her classmates at Frontier were older, Andrighetti started when she was just 25.

    “At that point, I was a baby of the class,” Andrighetti said. “Everybody that was in my class was at the other end of family life, so their kids were in high school, college, things like that. They were in their 40s and 50s. Here I was doing it prior to kids and life-altering adjustments. I still have some close friendships with the midwives I went to school with.”

    After graduating from Frontier, Andrighetti worked in a private practice in New London, Connecticut, for a couple of years and then worked at a small community hospital while her husband attended law school. When Andrighetti was seven months pregnant, she left practice for a few years to stay home and raise her family. Her return to the workplace was a gradual one that well-suited Andrighetti’s work-life balance at the time.

    She received a letter from Frontier in search of RCFs in her area. Andrighetti applied and eventually was hired as what she describes as a “part-time RCF” because she only had two students during her first year.

    “I had one-and-a-half and three-year-old children at that time,” Andrighettti said. “I did the RCF role, and then I became a teaching associate. I was working with Amy Marowitz (DNP, CNM), and Deborah Karsnitz (DNP, CNM, FACNM) in their courses, and they both took leaves to get their doctorates. I was the one in charge of their courses while they were gone. So I kind of got sucked back into full-time work, and I could see the writing on the wall that we were all going to be getting doctorates. So then I came back and did the DNP program.”

    Andrighetti credits FNU President Dr. Susan Stone, DNSc, CNM, FACNM, FAAN, with helping her narrow her focus while in the DNP program, and eventually, she locked in on clinical simulations as her target area.

    “I conducted research, and I developed the simulations that the midwives were going to use at Clinical Bound,” Andrighetti said. “I trained all the faculty how to run these and then ran them with the students and then conducted research on whether they were effective in helping them learn their new role.”

    Soon, Andrighetti became the Clinical Bound team leader. She furthered her knowledge by participating in the National League for Nursing’s year-long simulation-leader program as well as a week-long training at Drexel University.

    “Half of the week at Drexel was on the high fidelity mannequins, but on the other half of the week, it was with standardized patients,” Andrighetti said.

    “That was my first exposure to standardized patients,” Andrighetti said. “There were four groups of us, and each group wrote a simulation for another group. So we learned how to write the simulations, but then we also had to be the students so we could see what it felt like from the student’s perspective. After that, I was sold on the fact that standardized patients were the key to what we needed. Our students need to practice that interaction. Yes, they need to do hand skills and things like that, but they need to practice talking to somebody while doing those skills also.”

    To develop simulations at Frontier, faculty create the health care scenario and write a script for the standardized patient. The standardized patient interacts with the students to enact the role as if they were a real live patient. The result is an interaction between the student and patient in which the student acts as the health care provider under faculty supervision. The goal is for the student to collect information, diagnose, and provide a treatment plan as if it were a real patient-healthcare provider interaction. This practice environment is invaluable to the student’s learning experience.

    Andrighetti combined her training in simulations with research to determine what simulations were most impactful for Frontier students.

    “Part of the gap analysis I did during my doctorate was to look at some software we had back then to figure out what our students were getting exposed to during clinicals,” she said. “It was about 50 percent for shoulder dystocia and 50 percent for postpartum hemorrhage. Basically, half of our students did not have one of those two complications while they were students. That sold me on the fact that the first time they are going to have to manage these high acuity, high morbidity, and mortality events could potentially be on their own without a lot of resources. We have to have it the most lifelike we can because this may be their only practice ever before they are the ones who are in charge of doing it.”

    Today, Andrighetti is an associate professor as well as FNU’s Innovation Coach and Simulation Coordinator working with all programs. She consults with other faculty to help determine what simulations are needed and also relies on student surveys and input to help adjust and improve the simulations.

    “When we query the students, consistently what they will say is, ‘It was one of the most nerve-wracking things I’ve had to do, but I’m so glad on the other side of it that I got to have that experience in a safe environment where I’m not going to harm someone and I got to practice some skills that I might be less than ideal at.’”

    As she celebrates her 20th anniversary at Frontier in March, Andrighetti eyes the future with the goal of continuing to grow and develop FNU’s simulations.

    “This award is coming at a time when I feel the hard work that I’ve put into Frontier with the simulations is really coming to fruition. I really feel like we have a simulation program now,” she said. “When I eventually leave Frontier, I hope I leave it in really good shape so the simulation program continues well after I’m gone. It’s an established part of healthcare right now, and we are definitely on the forefront of how to deliver these simulations to our students.”

  • 2024 Distinguished Preceptor Award Recipient: Sandi Mellor

    2024 Distinguished Preceptor Award Recipient: Sandi Mellor

    The Distinguished Preceptor Award recognizes a graduate providing long-standing support and commitment to the mission and work of Frontier Nursing Service and Frontier Nursing University through precepting students. The 2024 recipient of this award is Dr. Sandi Mellor, DNP, APRN, FNP.

    Growing up in her hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Dr. Sandi Mellor, DNP (Class 30), APRN, FNP-BC, knew at a young age that she wanted to pursue a career in healthcare so she could “help people get healthy and stay healthy.” Determined to do just that, she took a medical-surgical nursing class while still in high school. After high school, she worked towards her associate degree in nursing and worked as a nurse for three years for the National Health Authority in Bedford, England, where her husband was stationed as a member of the U.S. Air Force.

    “I thought I wanted to be a physician, but after taking my first nursing medical-surgical class in high school, I fell in love with being with the patients,” said Mellor, who has worked as a nurse for almost thirty years.

    Upon returning to the United States, she went back to school and earned a bachelor of science in nursing in 1998. While raising two sons, she worked in the cardiac intensive care unit, pediatric intensive care unit, and neonatal intensive care unit, as well as the trauma and emergency room. She recognized that many of these patients required not only emergency or urgent care but also primary care management of their comorbidities. Inspired to serve the underserved, she went back to school to become a family nurse practitioner. She earned her FNP in 2004, the same year she and her husband had a baby daughter.

    They moved back to Tulsa in 2007, where Mellor began training internal medicine residents how to be providers. She also began precepting FNP students. She left the resident clinic setting in January 2010 to open her first family practice, where she found more opportunities to precept and teach BSN and FNP students while serving the underserved. At her clinic, Mellor accepts those on Medicaid or without insurance and has Spanish-speaking translators on staff to help make sure all are welcome. At the second clinic that she opened, Neighborhood Medical Clinic, Mellor provides both family and urgent care.

    “I always wanted to serve the underserved and felt called to nursing,” Mellor said. “I can see the entire family and treat them, with or without insurance. I can give free care to families. I see one child that has strep throat, and I can see the other children in the family and the parents and do not have to charge each of them because I own the practice.”

    Mellor’s practice not only provides essential service to the community but also serves as a training ground for others who follow in her footsteps. She is eager to precept students, including approximately a dozen from Frontier Nursing University, with a time commitment of nearly 600 hours per student.

    “I decided to earn my DNP from Frontier Nursing University as I had precepted so many students from there and found it to be a very prestigious program,” said Mellor, who earned her DNP in 2019. “Their FNP students were prepared and knowledgeable. I also researched the DNP program, and it was and still is one of the top in the nation. (FNU Director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice Program) Dr. Khara’ Jefferson (DNP, APRN, FNP-C, CHC) was patient and guided me to “trust the process”, and I was able to complete a project I was truly proud of that is still in use today. I was able to make a change in a vulnerable population and serve the underserved. It has helped me guide Quality Improvement projects at my clinic, teach in the FNP/DNP programs, and always encourage others to maintain the highest standards of nursing by continuing their education.”

    Not only has the passion that Mellor had for nursing and helping others as a child never waned, but it has grown stronger and deeper as she has seen the impact that she can have in her community and beyond.

    “I enjoy teaching and precepting because I get to see the ‘aha’ moments where the theory/didactic and practice guidelines make sense in clinical practice,” Mellor said. “I get to see the growth of a student becoming what they dreamed of earning – their RN or FNP qualifications. I get to influence and help the next generation of nurse practitioners to maintain our high standards and continue to improve the quality of healthcare for all. I get to be part of the positive change in healthcare as NPs increase their presence and roles in providing care for everyone.”

    In addition to teaching through precepting, Mellor also has ventured into course development and classroom teaching. She wrote the FNP courses and taught the first three graduating classes from the University of Tulsa FNP program. She has also worked with Oral Roberts University and the University of Oklahoma.

    “It is a way to give back to the nursing profession that has given me so much and fulfilled my calling,” Mellor said. “I want to write a book about nurses, and I hope I can continue to work as a nurse practitioner, precept, and teach all levels of nursing as well. I am interested in earning my PMHNP certification as well as continuing to serve my community. I will continue to advocate for full-practice authority and showcase the benefits nurse practitioners bring to bridging the gap in healthcare.”

    Her advocacy efforts have included volunteering for the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) FNP content expert panel. To date, she has served on the panel for six years, including two as the elected chair of the panel.

    “Nurses have to be the change we need in healthcare,” Mellor said, explaining her interest in being an advocate. “We are the largest population and the most trusted for many reasons. So we must be the ones to lead those positive changes towards improvement.”

    And to help people get healthy and stay healthy.

  • 2024 Day of Giving Challenges

    2024 Day of Giving Challenges

    2024 Day of Giving Challenges

      • State Challenge – Let’s see if we can get at least one donor from each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia. That would be 51 donors towards our 150-donor goal. Call colleagues, friends, and classmates from across the country to get them involved. We want to hear from you! Tell us on social media where you are donating from. We can’t wait to see if we can fill a United States map in these next 24 hours.
        Timeline: 24 hours from 12pm-12pm
      • Program Challenge – Let’s have a friendly competition between programs! We want to see which FNU program has the most spirit! We will count donors in the next 24 hours and the program with the most donors giving back will be named, “Most Philanthropic”
        Timeline: 24 hours from 12pm-12pm
      • Alumni Challenge – We have a generous donor who will make a $500 gift to Day of Giving if we can secure 10 alumni donors on Tuesday from 3 – 4 PM!
        Timeline: Tuesday from 3 PM to 4 PM
      • Dr. Torica Fuller Scholarship – We are excited to announce a special donor challenge for our Day of Giving! Dr. Torica Fuller, a proud alumni, supporter and faculty member of Frontier University, has generously pledged $1,000 to the Dr. Torica Fuller Excellence in Diversity Scholarship for WHNP/FNP students. But there’s a twist: this gift will be unlocked when 10 WHNP/FNP alumni join in by making a gift of any amount to support student scholarships.

        Give to this scholarship: https://form-renderer-app.donorperfect.io/give/frontier-nursing-university/dr-torica-fuller-excellence-in-diversity-scholarshipDonorPerfect Forms
        Timeline: 24 hours from 12pm-12pm

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