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  • Graduate Spotlight: Three-time FNU graduate Jennifer Baxter serves and precepts alongside fellow alumni at Illinois midwifery practice

    Graduate Spotlight: Three-time FNU graduate Jennifer Baxter serves and precepts alongside fellow alumni at Illinois midwifery practice

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented 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 work with all people, with an emphasis on rural and underserved communities.

    Frontier Nursing University graduate Jennifer Baxter, MSN, CNM, NP-C, APRN-FPA, has built a career rooted in both compassionate care and lifelong learning.

    Baxter earned her Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) with a specialty in Nurse-Midwifery from FNU, and later expanded her expertise by earning Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) and Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner (WHNP) post-graduate certificates through the university.

    Today, Baxter serves her home community of Aurora, Illinois, as a Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM) with Rush Copley Medical Group Midwifery. For the past seven years, she has worked alongside a team of dedicated CNMs to provide comprehensive gynecological and obstetrical care to women of all ages. The practice emphasizes interactive, relationship-centered care, where practitioners take time to get to know each patient and understand their unique health needs.

    “I try to give my patients several options,” she said. “I present them with information and let them choose which way they would like to proceed. For instance, if you are coming to midwifery because you want a water birth, great! If you are coming to midwifery because your friend told you we were nice and you want an epidural, also great! I really like to get to know my patients personally.”

    The team’s areas of care include gynecological exams; menopause management; pregnancy and prenatal care; routine and annual exams; family planning and preconception counseling; and individualized and alternative births, including waterbirths.

    In a testament to FNU’s lasting impact, both of Baxter’s partners at Rush Copley Medical Group Midwifery, Rebekah Hernandez and Stephanie Miller, are also FNU graduates, creating a team united by shared values and a common educational foundation.

    “I feel like Frontier emphasized looking at the evidence,” Baxter said. “I like working with a team that truly practices evidence-based care.”

    Baxter said her path to midwifery was inspired by her childhood.

    “I am the oldest of eight children,” she said. “It seemed like my mom was always pregnant! It was so fascinating to me. I wanted to be an OB/GYN doctor, but I also really wanted to get married and have kids of my own. Since medical school and residency would be so long, I decided instead to be a nurse, like my mom. In my OB nursing class, I learned about nurse-midwifery and knew immediately that was what I was going to do.”

    When choosing to pursue FNU for her education, Baxter recalls a serendipitous connection.

    “One year after I became a nurse, I had my first baby. She was delivered by a Frontier grad,” she said. “She asked me if she could attend my birth and I told her she could only if she would get me information about her school. ”

    Baxter said upon enrolling at FNU in 2001, she was initially skeptical of the distance learning model but quickly had a change of heart.

    “I thought this distance learning thing wouldn’t actually be as good as a regular university, but with three babies, that was the only way it would be possible for me,” she said. “Boy was I wrong! It turned out that Frontier was the best school experience I had ever had.”

    Baxter pursued her WHNP post-graduate certificate immediately after earning her CNM. She said when she made the decision to pursue her FNP post-graduate certificate in 2014, she was more than confident in enrolling at FNU once again.

    “I didn’t even explore schools, I went right back to Frontier,” she said. “I knew I would get another great education. Currently, I am working only as a nurse-midwife, but I am very thankful that I have my FNP because as I get older, night shifts as a midwife are getting more difficult. With the FNP certificate, I will have many options available when I decide to stop doing deliveries.”

    Beyond her clinical work, Baxter is helping to shape the next generation of healthcare professionals by serving as a preceptor. So far, she has precepted two FNU students, including a new certified nurse-midwife from Class 208. She said she teaches her students the essentials of quality care, from thorough exams and careful charting to giving patients options, asking questions, staying calm in emergencies, building strong relationships, collaborating with staff, and enjoying the work.

    “I think the world needs more great advanced practice nurses,” she said. “I like precepting so I can show my students what it takes to be that APRN. This work can be exhausting, but you will never regret it!”

    Thank you, Jennifer, for embodying the mission of FNU graduates through dedicated service to your community and by passing on your knowledge and passion for patient-centered care.

    To read more graduate stories, visit the FNU Alumni page on our blog.

  • Dr. Brooke A. Flinders Receives Insight Into Academia Magazine’s 2026 Trailblazer in Higher Education Award

    Dr. Brooke A. Flinders Receives Insight Into Academia Magazine’s 2026 Trailblazer in Higher Education Award

    Frontier Nursing University President Brooke A. Flinders, DNP, RN, APRN-CNM, FACNM, was named a recipient of Insight Into Academia magazine’s 2026 Trailblazer in Higher Education Award. 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.

    “I am honored and humbled to receive the Trailblazer Award,” Dr. Flinders said. “This recognition reflects my dedication to advancing Frontier’s longstanding legacy of innovation and progress as we prepare our graduates to meet the evolving needs of the communities in which they practice.”

    Since beginning her presidency on August 1, 2024, Dr. Flinders has demonstrated a transformational yet servant‑leader approach that is already shaping a stronger future for Frontier Nursing University. Her vision, passion, integrity, and unwavering commitment to the success of students, faculty, and staff distinguish her as a true trailblazer in higher education.

    In her first 90 days, Dr. Flinders scheduled opportunities to meet with every employee to foster open dialogue and strengthen organizational alignment. She subsequently launched a nationwide listening tour, engaging directly with students, faculty, staff, preceptors, alumni, and clinical partners across the country. The tour spanned more than 10,000 miles and included visits to 17 alumni‑staffed or owned practice settings.

    Dr. Flinders’ first year culminated in the unveiling of FNU’s new strategic plan during her September 2025 investiture. “The crossroads between higher education and healthcare are different today than they have ever been,” Dr. Flinders said. “We will continue to face our own unique challenges, and we will navigate them in new and innovative ways.”

    In less than two years as President, Dr. Flinders has advanced innovative strategies to expand access, strengthen academic excellence, promote student success, and address national workforce needs, particularly in rural and underserved communities. Her compassionate, mission‑driven leadership has elevated FNU’s impact and empowered the entire FNU community to thrive, solidifying her influence as a leader shaping the future of graduate nursing education.

    “We had great confidence when we selected Dr. Flinders as our new president in 2024, but she has vastly exceeded all expectations,” said FNU Board Chair Marcus Osborne. “She is a natural, visionary leader who never loses sight of the goal and the steps that must be taken to get there. She is a team‑builder who embraces and values the input of students, alumni, faculty, staff, and board members to ensure we all share the same vision for the university.”

    “We believe the future of higher education depends on leaders who are willing to challenge convention and embrace bold, impactful innovation,” said Lenore Pearlstein, owner and publisher of Insight Into Academia magazine. “The 2026 Trailblazer honorees represent the highest levels of strategic leadership in the field, and we are proud to celebrate their extraordinary accomplishments.”

    Dr. Flinders will be featured alongside 17 other distinguished honorees in the March 2026 issue of Insight Into Academia. For more information about the Trailblazer in Higher Education Award, visit insightintoacademia.com.

    Dr. Flinders holds a Master of Science in Nursing and a Doctor of Nursing Practice degree from Frontier, as well as an Associate Degree of Science in Nursing and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Miami University (Ohio). Read her full biography here.

  • Frontier Nursing University Unveils $20 Million Student Scholarship Investment

    Frontier Nursing University Unveils $20 Million Student Scholarship Investment

    The Frontier Nursing University Board of Directors has approved a proposal to utilize $20 million of the university’s unrestricted endowment funds for scholarships. The designation of these funds demonstrates the Board and university’s commitment to providing a high-quality education that prepares nurses to become competent, entrepreneurial, ethical, and compassionate nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners, with an emphasis on rural and underserved communities.

    “This is a significant investment in support of our students, and one we are proud to champion,” said Marcus Osborne, Chair of the FNU Board of Directors. “On behalf of the Board, I want to express my gratitude for the work of our Chief Financial Officer Kylie Waters, and her team, as well as our finance committee, led by board member Michael Steinmetz. This was a comprehensive project to identify the best way to support our goal to provide accessible education.”

    In keeping with the university’s spending policy, the university will fund the scholarships by spending the annual yield from the $20 million unrestricted endowment funds. The yield is projected to be approximately $800,000 annually.

    “This commitment to more scholarship opportunities is a direct reflection of the Board of Directors’ enduring support for our students and our mission,” FNU President Dr. Flinders said.

    FNU maintains an average enrollment of 2,800 students from across the country. FNU’s programs lead to a Master of Science in Nursing (MSN), a Post-Graduate Certificate, or a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP). FNU also offers a Post-Master’s DNP for certified nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners who already hold a national certification and want to pursue a DNP.

    “Our students are already professional healthcare providers when they come to us,” Dr. Flinders said. “Their dedication to advance their knowledge and expertise to better serve their communities is impactful and inspirational. These scholarships support their goals by making advanced nursing education accessible.”

    A December 2025 report released by the Health Resources and Services Administration projected an 8% shortage of registered nurses in the United States by 2028. Additionally, the American College of Nurse-Midwives estimates the U.S has a shortage of more than 8,000 nurse-midwives based on the World Health Organization’s recommendation of no less than six nurse-midwives per 1,000 live births.

    “There is a growing demand for financial assistance,” Waters said. “Our existing scholarship program is substantial, and with this responsible use of our unrestricted endowment funds, we continue to demonstrate commitment to supporting our students. Frontier Nursing University is uniquely positioned to address the nursing shortage through our community-based, and distance education format. This investment will provide critical support to FNU’s students as they prepare to address healthcare challenges in their home communities across the country.”

  • Faculty Spotlight: NRHA Names Associate Professor Dr. Joanne Keefe a 2026 Rural Health Fellow

    Faculty Spotlight: NRHA Names Associate Professor Dr. Joanne Keefe a 2026 Rural Health Fellow

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented community of students, graduates, 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 work with all people, with an emphasis on rural and underserved communities.

    Frontier Nursing University Associate Professor Dr. Joanne Keefe, DNP, MPH, FNP-c, CNE, was recently selected as a member of the 2026 cohort of Rural Health Fellows by the National Rural Health Association (NRHA), a reflection of her commitment to providing quality care to rural and underserved communities. Following a competitive review process, 18 fellows were selected to participate in this yearlong program, which is designed to cultivate national leaders who can champion a clear and compelling vision for rural America.

    “I look forward to connecting with and sharing strategies with others who strive to improve rural healthcare and impact policy,” Dr. Keefe said. “When I applied, my focus was on my local community, but I also understood that working locally supports national efforts, and vice versa. I hope to bring the things I learn to the FNU community as well. We are the strongest and benefit the greatest number of people when we work together.”

    For Dr. Keefe, improving access to rural healthcare is a daily commitment. She is the co-founder and director of Catron County Cares (CCC), a 501(c)3 nonprofit with the focus of increasing access to healthcare in Catron County, New Mexico. Dr. Keefe founded the nonprofit in January 2025 with four likeminded professionals to identify and address and raise awareness of healthcare gaps, and to collaborate with community and external partners to improve the county’s healthcare access.

    CCC offers free CPR and First Aid training to anyone in the community and is preparing to launch an initiative in which CCC Emergency Kiosks will be placed around the community. The kiosks will house an AED, first aid kit, pulse oximeter, naloxone, and other triage equipment.

    “People in my rural community are suffering, dying, and have worse overall outcomes than the rest of the nation because they do not have access to healthcare,” Dr. Keefe said. “There is no hospice, no home health, no PT/OT or pharmacy, and currently, the only primary health clinic in the 7,000-square-mile county operates out of a hotel room. In 2025, it is inconceivable that where you live affects how long and how well you live, but it does.”

    Dr. Keefe has been a faculty member at Frontier since 2015 and is currently an Associate Professor in the Doctor of Nursing (DNP) program. She received the Frontier Student Choice Award for Teaching Excellence in 2018 and was presented with a DAISY Award in 2020, an international recognition program that honors nurses for compassionate, skillful care. In her role at FNU, she enjoys fostering success, especially with challenging content such as Epidemiology and Biostatistics

    “Meaningful teaching, to me, means focusing on what is important and ensuring that students can apply it in the future to enhance their practice and provide excellent care to their patients,” she said. “There is a lot of guidance around what is important; that part is fairly easy. The joy is in devising ways to make it interesting, understandable, and accessible so that students can successfully gain the tools they need to be outstanding providers.”

    Dr. Keefe’s relationship with FNU goes far beyond her role as a faculty member. She is a two-time FNU graduate, earning her Family Nurse Practitioner MSN and Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) in 2013 and 2014, respectively. She obtained her Associates Degree in Nursing from Montgomery College in Takoma Park, MD, Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of Phoenix (1999) and Master’s in Public Health from the University of New Mexico (2005).

    “The history of the FNS (Frontier Nursing Service) and Mary Breckinridge has resonated with me since my first orientation to Frontier Nursing University at Frontier Bound,” Dr. Keefe said. “What incredible lineage and history we share.”

    At FNU, Dr. Keefe is a 2025-2026 President’s Academic Fellow, a selective program that offers faculty members the opportunity to engage in focused leadership development alongside a small cohort of esteemed colleagues. The diverse perspectives within the cohort contributed meaningfully to strategic planning efforts and the formation of additional collaborative groups.

    Dr. Keefe also volunteered as a speaker for the Office of Student Engagement’s speaker series, where she highlighted challenges facing rural and frontier communities and shared the work of CCC. She said the presentation revealed strong interest in continued conversation and collaboration around rural healthcare within the FNU community. In response, she plans to create a shared space at FNU for discussing interventions, seeking support, and exchanging resources.

    “I look forward to further collaboration as we join forces and work together in our local communities, significantly improving healthcare access on a larger scale,” she said. “I am excited to see where this goes. Truly, we can be like the Banyan Tree in rural healthcare, growing roots far and wide, as Mary Breckinridge envisioned.”

    In addition, Dr. Keefe said she is grateful for Frontier Nursing University’s Chi Pi Chapter of the Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing, along with FNU colleagues, administration, Board members and others, for their guidance and support.

    “There is an incredible network of support around taking care of people, and I feel grateful and hopeful about this work,” she said.

    Along with her work with FNU and CCC, Dr. Keefe also holds memberships in numerous nursing and health associations, including the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, the New Mexico Nurse Practitioner Council, the American Nurses Association, the National Organization for Nurse Practitioner Faculty, and the National Rural Health Association. She has also been an Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing peer evaluator since September 2024.

    Dr. Keefe said she is grateful for organizations like these, along with the Quemado Auxiliary, Catron County Historical Society and the NRHA for their enduring support. She said when CCC was being established, the organization was awarded assistance from NRHA through the Rural Health Community Capacity Academy to help with year-long coaching and a grant-writing class.

    “All organizations, from local to national, offer rich opportunities for networking and collaboration, particularly when approached with a humble attitude,” she said.

    Dr. Keefe said her background, which spans nursing, public health, academia, and community leadership, have coalesced in ways she could have never envisioned.

    “The experiences and education I have been privileged to access provide me with an understanding of tools and systems to measure and solve problems effectively and efficiently, and give me the confidence to try,” she said. “Living in a rural/frontier community, however, has been the best teacher about current issues with rural healthcare.”

    Looking toward her future with CCC and as a Rural Health Fellow, Dr. Keefe said her vision is to “expand the work.”

    “I don’t know exactly what this will look like, but it will include true collaboration, sharing, policy work, novel approaches, and increasing partnership areas to make it happen,” she said. “This is not a time to shrink and accept what is; this is a time to realize our power. We can, and will, do this better together.”

    Thank you, Joanne, for your unwavering commitment to serving rural communities and for inspiring others through your compassion, dedication, and commitment to the values that define FNU.

  • Featured Preceptor: Leatrice Gachette guides students in discovering their power 

    Featured Preceptor: Leatrice Gachette guides students in discovering their power 

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented community of students, graduates, 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 work with all people, with an emphasis on rural and underserved communities.

    Leatrice Gachette, MSN, APRN, CNM, exemplifies a strong commitment to education, mentorship, and service, both through her clinical work and through her role as a preceptor. Gachette serves as a Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM) with AdventHealth in Winter Haven, Florida, where she works primarily with underserved and low-income women and families, many of whom face barriers to consistent healthcare access. She earned her Master’s of Science in Nursing (MSN) in Midwifery from FNU and is currently pursuing her Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) at Frontier.

    In her practice, Gachette provides compassionate, culturally-sensitive, and patient-centered midwifery care that includes prenatal, birth, postpartum, and gynecologic services. Her work helps bridge healthcare gaps, ensuring that every patient feels heard, respected, and supported throughout their reproductive health journey.

    Going beyond her clinical work, Gachette said her decision to become a preceptor is rooted in gratitude and a desire to give back.

    “I am the midwife that I am today because several elder midwives decided to take me under their wings and guide me in my clinical experience,” she said. “I decided to become a preceptor in order to give that same gift to other students on the journey I once had to travel.”

    She said she is also motivated by a broader vision of the profession and its role in addressing maternal outcomes in the U.S.

    “Mentoring in this way allows me to help nurture the development of compassionate and culturally competent midwives of the future,” she said.

    To date, Gachette has precepted two FNU students. She said she finds deep fulfillment watching their growth, especially during moments of realization and confidence-building. These “aha” moments, she said, are a major motivator in her precepting journey.

    “I also love to see how they bring themselves to midwifery; guiding them as they discover how to provide midwifery care while still showing up as their authentic selves,” she said.

    Lawrena Govan, a former student and now mentee of Gachette’s, said her mentor embodies the core values of midwifery: compassion, equity, and advocacy.

    “She is deeply committed to serving marginalized communities and goes above and beyond to ensure her patients receive respectful, holistic care,” Govan said. “As a role model and mentor, she not only uplifts her patients but also inspires future nurse-midwives through her dedication, skill, and unwavering belief in birth justice.”

    Precepting, Gachette notes, is a reciprocal experience: one that continues to shape her professional growth. She said she learns just as much from her students as they learn from her.

    “Precepting can be as beautiful as birth,” she said. “Just as you serve as a guiding light to mothers as they discover and utilize their power to bring forth life, you guide students as they discover and bring forth their power to do the same.”

    Thank you, Leatrice, for your dedication to mentorship, your commitment to equity in care, and your ongoing service to students, patients and the midwifery profession.

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

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

  • Exploring Job Options with a Doctor of Nursing Practice 

    Exploring Job Options with a Doctor of Nursing Practice 

    As the highest degree in clinical nursing practice, a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) can prepare healthcare professionals to not only provide excellent care, but also to shape how care is delivered. Earning a DNP opens the door to a world of opportunities in healthcare leadership, clinical experience and community impact. The expanded career paths available through earning a DNP are as diverse as they are rewarding.

    A Meaningful Impact on Care Quality

    The online DNP program at Frontier Nursing University allows students to achieve their educational goals while balancing their careers and day-to-day responsibilities. FNU’s program offers flexible learning models and students complete coursework while continuing to serve patients in their home communities. Students begin Frontier’s online DNP program with a three-day on-campus orientation experience where they meet and build a support network with their faculty and peers. Upon completion of didactic coursework, students collaborate with their chosen clinical site to lead a rapid cycle quality improvement (QI) project.

    By leading QI projects, DNP students can make a meaningful impact on quality of care before they graduate. FNU DNP student Emilee Kidd, MSN, APRN, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC completed a QI project in 2025 to improve mental health care in a university clinic setting at Montana State University. According to the Montana Department of Public Health & Human Services, Montana has ranked in the top five for suicide rates in the nation for the past 40 years for all age groups.

    Emilee worked with the clinic to develop a modified Bundled Mental Health Screening tool to screen for depression, anxiety, insomnia, eating disorders, and suicidal ideation. A Mental Health Management Checklist was also developed to manage positive screenings.

    The effective mental health care baseline was 10% and increased to a project total of 88%. The mental health screening tool and smart phrases had the most significant impact on improving effective mental health care by identifying patients with mental health concerns and standardizing documentation. Emilee concluded that mental health screenings in university clinics are imperative and early intervention can improve care and prevent a crisis.

    Why Pursue a DNP?

    Frontier Nursing University’s DNP degree builds advanced skills in evidence-based practice, quality improvement, and systems leadership. Graduates are equipped to improve patient outcomes, lead interdisciplinary teams, and help change health policy at the local, regional and national level. No matter where you are in your career, whether you are working as a nurse practitioner, nurse-midwife, or nurse leader, a DNP can help you take your career to the next level.

    Career Paths for DNP Graduates 

    • Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) – With a DNP, nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, nurse-midwives and more can deliver specialized, high-quality care with additional expertise in a specialized area.
    • Healthcare Executive or Administrator – nurses who earn their DNP can advance into leadership positions, such as chief nursing officer, director of clinical operations, healthcare program administrator and more. These roles involve shaping policy, managing teams and improving healthcare systems.
    • Clinical Educator or Faculty Member – DNP graduates are uniquely positioned to educate the next generation of nurses in a variety of settings, from universities to community colleges to teaching hospitals. By sharing expertise, DNP-prepared educators and faculty members help ensure a well-prepared healthcare workforce for years to come.
    • Policy and Advocacy Leader – With a combination of clinical insight and system-wide thinking, DNP-prepared nurses can leverage their knowledge to help influence healthcare legislation and advocate for patient-centered policy.
    • Clinical Researcher – DNP graduates can contribute to advancing healthcare through applied clinical research. While PhD-prepared nurses often focus on theory development, DNP-prepared clinical researchers bridge the gap between research and practice by translating findings into real-world solutions.

    Take the Next Step 

    If you’re ready to take the next step as a nurse leader, a DNP degree could be the path for you. Through advanced clinical knowledge and strategic leadership training, FNU DNP students are equipped to take on new roles with confidence, backed by didactic learning and real-world experience.

    For more on how to apply to Frontier Nursing University, please click here. View important application deadlines here.

    To learn more about earning your DNP online through Frontier Nursing University, click here.

  • The Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served: A Community of Caring and Collaboration (Part 3 of 3)

    The Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served: A Community of Caring and Collaboration (Part 3 of 3)

    The Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served is a three-part series covering the history of Frontier Nursing University. On the rugged hills of Eastern Kentucky, nurses earned trust by listening, learning from local families, and standing beside them in moments of illness, birth, and crisis. Over time, this collaboration improved health outcomes, reduced maternal and infant mortality, and strengthened the well-being of the community they served.

    By Janet L. Engstrom, PhD, APRN, CNM, WHNP-BC, CNE, Anne Z. Cockerham, PhD, APRN, CNM, WHNP-BC, CNE, and Joanne M. Keefe, DNP, MPH, APRN, FNP-c, CNE

    More Than Healthcare Providers: Nurses as Friends and Neighbors

    The bond between the FNS nurses and the local people extended beyond professional care; it was a relationship rooted in mutual trust and shared survival. The nurses took care of the people in the community by providing essential health services, and the community took care of the nurses, the administrative staff, the animals, equipment, buildings, and properties. Local families assisted the nurses in numerous ways, guiding the nurses to a patient’s home during the night, offering shelter in bad weather, or helping a horse with a problem. Although the families had limited space and resources, they would invite the nurse to share their meal, feed their horse, make room for a nurse to stay overnight if needed, and sometimes giving the nurses handcrafted items.

    Hand-crafted stool given to Mary Bristow Willeford (1926-1938)by a grateful family.

    Hand-crafted stool given to Mary Bristow Willeford (1926-1938) by a grateful family. The gift meant much to Willeford and has been maintained by her family since her death in 1941.

    One particularly challenging problem for both the nurses and families was floods, which could make travel difficult to impossible. One day a flood kept Gladys Peacock and Mary Bristow Willeford from seeing their patients. However, a man knocked on their door to tell them that his wife was in labor. Although his wife had sent him, he told the nurses that he didn’t think they should come because the trip was treacherous. But the FNS rule was that if the husband could get to the nurse, the nurse would get to the mother. And, the nurses wanted to go, they had been seeing the woman for prenatal care and wanted to assist her at birth. The weather prohibited travel by horse, so they set off on foot with the man carrying their saddlebags. Over the next three hours, they walked six miles across newly plowed fields that were knee deep in mud, traversed a rustic swinging bridge swaying above the tumultuous river, and climbed a steep mountainside using tree branches and roots to pull themselves up. When they arrived, they were wet, muddy, their sleeves were ripped, and their arms were scratched. But when they went into the cabin the mother smiled and told them she knew that they would come. The nurses quickly prepared for the birth, and minutes later, a daughter was born and named Mary Gladys after the nurses.

    Community members also became an essential part of the FNS workforce, working alongside staff who came from elsewhere. The local people provided essential services such as cooking, cleaning, laundering, caring for the animals and buildings, maintaining equipment and properties, and every other task that needed to be done, enabling the nurses to do their work. Although the skills of the mountaineers were essential, it was also their knowledge of the land, the people, and the animals that kept the nurses safe and made the organization successful.

    FNS nurses often developed friendships with community members. The nurses lived and worked centers in the community and were well known to their neighbors who not only received care from the nurses but also watched their comings and goings on their visits to families. As neighbors, the nurses might stop to chat with someone along their route about their health or the weather or who had a baby. FNS Nurse Della Int-Hout, known as Inty, frequently stopped by to visit an older neighbor who was unable to travel to the nursing center. The woman did not believe in germs because she could not see them and Inty had been unable to persuade her otherwise. One day the woman’s granddaughter came to the nursing center to ask for a pair of ‘old-age’ glasses for her grandmother. Inty put several pairs in a shopping bag and told the girl to tell her grandmother to try on each pair and then attempt to thread a needle so she would know which pair was best. When the girl returned with the leftover glasses she told Inty that her grandmother was very pleased with the glasses and had told the girl to tell Inty that she ‘can now see a germ’.

    FNS nurse chatting with a local man in Hyden.

    FNS nurse chatting with a local man in Hyden.

    Leaving The Community with a Heavy Heart and Resettling Elsewhere

    The FNS stayed in their original Eastern Kentucky community far longer than many other independent visiting nursing services remained in their communities. Although the FNS provided nursing services in the community for 86 years, changes in healthcare and market forces led to the closure of the nursing service in 2011. After the closure of the nursing service, Frontier Nursing University leaders worked to remain in the Eastern Kentucky community, but the challenges became insurmountable with providing enough student and faculty housing, proximity to airports and expressways, and the need for larger modern facilities to provide optimal student learning experiences. It was with a heavy heart that university leaders decided to leave its Eastern Kentucky neighbors, buildings, and properties to resettle in Versailles, Kentucky. Rightfully, the FNS deeded the original buildings and properties to the community that helped build and maintain them for almost a century.

    Although the experiences of the original FNS nurses and staff in its original location can never be replicated, the experiences of the nurses and their community live on in the stories of the Frontier Nursing Service. Those stories provide inspiration and guidance to current students and faculty on how to enter a community, build relationships and trust, and create a nursing practice that meets the unique needs of the community. Although modern students no longer face the rugged and remote environment that the early nurses confronted, current students face different challenges and new frontiers in healthcare. The stories of the past also inform the university on how to resettle in its new community and build relationships with its new neighbors. Finally, the stories of the FNS constitute a remarkable part of American nursing history and should be told as an example of the very best that nursing has to offer and what can be accomplished when nurses work closely and respectfully with the community they serve.

    Read the Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served: A Community of Caring and Collaboration series on our blog.

  • The Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served: A Community of Caring and Collaboration (Part 2 of 3)

    The Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served: A Community of Caring and Collaboration (Part 2 of 3)

    The Nurses on Horseback and the People They Served is a three-part series covering the history of Frontier Nursing University. On the rugged hills of Eastern Kentucky, nurses earned trust by listening, learning from local families, and standing beside them in moments of illness, birth, and crisis. Over time, this collaboration improved health outcomes, reduced maternal and infant mortality, and strengthened the well-being of the community they served.

    By Janet L. Engstrom, PhD, APRN, CNM, WHNP-BC, CNE, Anne Z. Cockerham, PhD, APRN, CNM, WHNP-BC, CNE, and Joanne M. Keefe, DNP, MPH, APRN, FNP-c, CNE

    Trusting the Nurses to Provide New Types of Care and Treatments

    A major challenge for the FNS nurses was building enough trust with the community so that they would accept unfamiliar treatments such as vaccines. At the time, typhoid and diphtheria outbreaks were common and both were important causes of illness and death in children and adults. When there was an outbreak of typhoid fever in one community, two nurses were sent to the area to vaccinate as many people as possible. Although the community members had already gathered when the nurses arrived, no one stepped forward to receive the injection. Finally, one brave man understood the dilemma and stepped forward to be vaccinated and then brought his children to the nurses to be vaccinated. Everyone else followed. The next day the nurses administered 140 vaccines and by the end of the week, the entire community was vaccinated.

    While many people welcomed the nurses’ care for illnesses and injuries, some were reluctant to use the FNS nurse-midwives to attend their birth. Families often had pre-existing relationships with the local midwives and continued to have them attend their births. However, the local midwives did not provide prenatal, postnatal, or infant care, so the FNS nurses provided these important services regardless of who would attend the birth. During the first year of the service, the nurses attended only 30 births, and it would take several years to before they attended most of the births in the area.

    FNS nurse-midwife speaking with one of the local,community-based midwives.

    FNS nurse-midwife speaking with one of the local, community-based midwives.

    Another important way of building trust in the community was to demonstrate respect for the local people’s tradition and wishes, which sometimes conflicted with the standard nursing procedures. When one nurse was attending a woman during labor, a chicken kept jumping on the woman’s bed. When the nurse tried to ‘shoo’ the chicken off the bed, the mother asked the nurse to let the chicken stay because the chicken gave them an egg every day. Eggs were an important part of the mountaineer’s diet, so the chicken stayed and laid her egg, and then the mother gave birth to a healthy baby.

    Opening Their Lives to the Nurses and Guests

    Many families supported the work of the FNS by allowing people from outside their community access to their lives for the purposes of documentation, marketing, and fundraising. Since much of the money needed to run the FNS came from donations from outside of the mountains, the stories of the nurses’ work and the people they served had to be told and shown to the outside world. Thus, families were asked to allow people from the outside to visit their homes, eat dinner with the family, and even sleep in their home. The families allowed their stories and pictures to appear in magazines, books and films. The sharing of their personal lives as well as their space with visitors was a great gift as many families sacrificed their privacy, their limited food sources, and precious space in their small homes.

    Another demonstration of trust was when Nurse Mary Bristow. Willeford collected research data for her dissertation. Willeford surveyed families in the FNS service area asking personal questions about all sources of income and every type of health-related expense. Such questions could only be asked and answered because Willeford had worked and lived among the families and was a trusted nurse and community member.

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