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  • First Annual FNU Case Day and Panel on Birth Justice and Equity at ACNM 2018

    First Annual FNU Case Day and Panel on Birth Justice and Equity at ACNM 2018

    FNU Case Day at ACNM 2018Frontier Nursing University (FNU) faculty and staff members challenged their thinking about birth justice and reproductive oppression this year at the 2018 ACNM Conference in Savannah, Ga. FNU President Dr. Susan Stone, staff members Shelley Aldridge and Angela Bailey, and faculty members Drs. Jane Houston, Nena Harris, Niessa Meier and Ally Williams coordinated the first annual FNU Case Day and Panel on Birth Justice and Equity, held on May 22, 2018.

    Officially entitled “FNU Celebrates ‘The Soul of Savannah’: Taking us Back to our Beginnings: Being Colored & Colonized,” FNU’s hopes in pioneering and supporting this event was that it would lead to open conversation about equality in birth outcomes and allow many voices to be heard on the topic.

    The three-hour discussion began with Case Presentations from FNU students, who shared their case findings and information on health disparities. The presentations are listed below by student and topic:

    Lauren CoxVaginismus

    Stephanie MartinezChicago Birth Workers of Color (ChiBiWoCo) (see video here)

    Corianne ParadaPlacental Abruption

    FNU students Case Day presenters
    FNU students Case Day presenters at ACNM (left to right: Stephanie Martinez, Lauren Cox, Corianne Parada)

    Each presentation fulfilled the students’ Case Day requirements and allowed for questions after the closing statements.

    Stephanie Martinez, one of the case presenters, was pleased to have an open discussion about so many of the issues that plague their community. They are a co-founder of ChiBiWoCo, a grassroots collective of birth workers of color providing full spectrum services throughout the Chicagoland area.

    “Born out of need, we work to support communities of color in their birthing and reproductive choices through our ancestral wisdom and birthright,” said Martinez.

    Martinez entered the health care workforce after learning of the great prevalence of sterilization abuse and violence directed toward youth in the sex trade at the hands healthcare personnel.

    “We envision communities that are able to thrive, self-determine, and live autonomously, free from judgment, ridicule, and criminalization as it relates to their choices of parenting and birth.”

    FNU Birth Panel Participants at 2018 ACNM
    FNU Birth Panel Participants at 2018 ACNM

    The event continued with the Panel portion, an informative discussion about birth justice moderated by Keisha Edwards with FNU faculty members Nena Harris and Heather Clarke, FNU alumna Dalia Lee, and certified nurse-midwives Mandesa Smith and Venay Uecke.

    Participants shared clinical experiences and insights into how the health care workforce can address issues surrounding birth justice, health disparities and bias.

    The conversation that took place at the panel is one step in the right direction for tackling those disparities and creating optimal birth outcomes for more families around the nation.

    According to Nena Harris, PhD, FNP-BC, CNM, the discussion is one that needs to continue in order to keep pushing in the right direction.

    “We would like to do this event annually at ACNM,” said Harris.

    Panel participants came away with several takeaways from the discussion.

    “We need to actively listen to ALL midwives and birth partners (providers too), to improve pregnancy and health outcomes particularly among people of color and/or marginalized persons due to gender identity or sexual orientation,” said Dr. Jane Houston, DNP, CNM, ARNP, RM, Clinical Director of Midwifery and Women’s Health at FNU.

    “This annual event brought together a powerful group in a free discussion format for all stakeholders. Thanks, FNU, for your support of this venture.”

  • Frontier Nursing University Awarded $1.3 Million HRSA Program Grant

    Frontier Nursing University Awarded $1.3 Million HRSA Program Grant

    FNU LogoHyden, KY — Frontier Nursing University (FNU) has been awarded the Advanced Nursing Education Workforce (ANEW) grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). The grant totals $1,376,800 in funding from 2018-2020, including $600,000 in student scholarships.

    The goal of the ANEW program is to support innovative academic-practice partnerships to prepare primary care advanced practice registered nursing students to practice in rural and underserved settings through academic and clinical training. The partnerships support traineeships as well as infrastructure funds to schools of nursing and their practice partners who deliver longitudinal primary care clinical training experiences with rural and/or underserved populations.   

    As a university offering graduate nursing education and community-based clinical training using distance-learning strategies to reach students across the nation, FNU has the ability to have a widespread impact on primary care clinical education, and ultimately, on the quality and access to care in rural areas. Via the ANEW grant, FNU plans to support 350 nurse practitioner and nurse-midwifery students completing clinical training in rural areas with traineeship funds. This grant will also provide funds for the development of ANEW program infrastructure, implementation, and evaluation.

    Through this very important program, FNU will identify and co-create improved curriculum and clinical training experiences in collaboration with academic-practice partners (APPs) who are directly affected by the healthcare disparities facing the rural communities where they practice. This joint venture with our academic-practice partners will make it possible for FNU to test, implement, evaluate, and improve training for primary care preceptors and Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) students.  

    “We are honored to receive the ANEW grant and excited for the opportunities it creates,” said FNU president Dr. Susan E. Stone. “Since its founding, Frontier Nursing University has been committed to filling the gaps in quality healthcare available in rural and underserved populations. This grant will enable us to expand our impact and improve our ability to address healthcare disparities in communities across the country.”

    The overarching goal of the FNU ANEW program is to expand formal academic-practice partnerships in order to co-design and implement strategies to enhance the preparation and distribution of APRNs and nurse-midwives practicing in rural settings. The steps to achieving this goal include four primary objectives:

    Objective 1:  Improve student readiness to practice in rural primary care settings through co-designed and tailored didactic education and clinical training experiences through academic-practice partnerships.

    Objective 2:  Recruit, train, support, and evaluate clinical preceptors located in rural areas nationwide as program partners in order to leverage the quality and distribution of primary care preceptors in rural settings.

    Objective 3:  Provide 175 FNU students entering the clinical practicum in a rural setting with $2,000 in traineeship support each grant year.

    Objective 4:  Improve the distribution of APRNs and nurse-midwives throughout rural communities across the nation via improved strategies to support and connect trainees with rural clinical experience to primary care employment in those same settings.  

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    About Frontier Nursing University:

    The mission of FNU is to educate nurses to become competent, entrepreneurial, ethical and compassionate nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners who are leaders in the primary care of women and families with an emphasis on underserved and rural populations. FNU offers graduate Nurse-Midwifery and Nurse-Practitioner distance education programs that can be pursued full- or part-time with the student’s home community serving as the classroom. Degrees and options offered include Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) or Post-Graduate Certificates. To learn more about FNU and the programs and degrees offered, please visit Frontier.edu.

  • Frontier Nursing University Graduates Surpass National Board Examination Averages

    Frontier Nursing University Graduates Surpass National Board Examination Averages

    FNU LogoHYDEN, Ky. – Frontier Nursing University (FNU) graduates’ recent exam scores reveal the effectiveness of a properly-structured, affordable distance education nursing program.

    The American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB), the professional association that provides certifications for certified nurse-midwives (CNMs) and certified midwives (CMs) in the United States, released the scores from the 2017 examinations in February of 2018. FNU graduates passed the 2017 midwifery board exams with an average pass rate of 94.0%.

    FNU graduates comprised 33.7% of all the (AMCB) nurse-midwifery certification test-takers in the nation, totaling 254 graduates out of the 754 test-takers nationwide. Of the examination candidates that tested for the first time, FNU graduates made up 34.6%. The national pass rate for all test-takers for 2017 was 90.2%, while FNU’s overall pass rate exceeded it at 94.0%. FNU surpassed the national pass rate for first-time test-takers (92.0%) as well, with a pass rate of 95.0%.

    The National Certification Corporation (NCC) released the results of the 2017 Women’s Health Care Nurse Practitioner Exam in March 2018. FNU graduates passed at a rate of 97.9%, where the national average was 90.0%.

    The American Academy of Nurse Practitioners National Certification Board also released the results for the 2017 family nurse practitioner (FNP) Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) and Post-Graduate Certificate (PGC) examinations. The pass rate for FNU graduates in the MSN board exam was 97.0%. First-time FNU test-takers averaged a 95.0% pass rate, which was well above the national average of 80.0%.

    In June, the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) released the certification pass rate for 2017. FNU first-time takers for family nurse practitioner MSN students averaged a perfect 100.0% for the second consecutive year. Those testing with a post-graduate certificate for the first time averaged a score of 91.67%.

    The trend held for the FNP Post-Graduate Certificate examinations. FNU graduates passed at a 91.0% rate over all on both the AANP and ANCC exams, and first-time AANP test-takers nationwide passed at a rate of 82.0%.

    FNU is a distance education institution that prides itself in an affordable tuition rate ($34,000-37,000 for MSN). Since 1991, FNU has implemented a curriculum for distance learning developed to target the needs of nurses from rural and underserved areas. In addition to considering the above-average outcomes in the 2017 national certification examinations, all programs are structured and evaluated by the multiple accreditation processes of the professions and regional graduate level education.

    Currently, there are more than 2,000 students enrolled, with about half of those in the nurse-midwifery master’s program and all others in the nurse practitioner programs or doctoral program. FNU educates approximately one-third of all nurse-midwifery students in the U.S.

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    Frontier Nursing University is passionate about educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to serve women and families in all communities, especially rural and underserved areas. FNU offers graduate Nurse-Midwifery and Nurse-Practitioner distance education programs that can be pursued full- or part-time with the student’s home community serving as the classroom. Degrees and options offered include Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) or Post-Graduate Certificates. To learn more about FNU and the programs and degrees offered, please visit Frontier.edu.

  • Student Spotlight: Madeline Anderson, RN, BSN, CLC

    Student Spotlight: Madeline Anderson, RN, BSN, CLC

    Student Spotlight: Madeline Anderson, RN, BSN, CLC

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) student Madeline Anderson, RN, BSN, CLC is answering the call to serve a population of rural, underserved mothers – a call she experienced while halfway across the world. In April of 2018, Madeline traveled to Yala, Kenya with the Matibabu Foundation on a medical mission trip. A nurse-midwifery student at FNU, Madeline served in the maternity unit at Yala Hospital helping new moms deliver their children.

    She was dismayed to find out that women in Kenya have to bring their own supplies to the hospital for after delivering their child – things like a bar of soap and a baby blanket – and many of them can’t afford those basic supplies.

    Madeline, an RN in Labor & Delivery at Sky Ridge Medical Center in Lone Tree, Colo., returned stateside with a burning desire to see the new moms properly provided for. With two young children of her own, Madeline understood the importance for women to have healthy birth and postpartum experiences regardless of their economic status. Together with her friend Kate, she opened Mama Packs for Kenya, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that provides supplies for these new moms.

    A new mother receives a "mama pack" with essentials for her newborn
    A new mother receives a “mama pack” with essentials for her newborn

    The “mama packs,” which include: a roll of cotton, bar of soap, wash basin, baby blanket, plate, and cup, cost only $8-9 U.S. dollars to put together. Because Madeline works so closely with the Matibabu Foundation and the nurses at the Yala hospital, they are able to make all of the purchases for the packs in Kenya, saving on shipping and supporting the local economy.

    Mama Packs for Kenya has had such a great response that the hospital in Yala is already receiving a surplus of packs. Madeline plans to expand into other local Kenyan hospitals with the help of the Matibabu Foundation.

    Meanwhile, Madeline continues her FNU nurse-midwifery coursework. She is in CNEP class 158 and has found that her time at FNU has made her a more confident health care provider.

    “My experience at Frontier has been awesome,” she said. “The classes have really helped with building my confidence.”

    Madeline Anderson smiles with a mother and baby at Yala hospital
    Madeline smiles with a mother and baby at Yala hospital

    Madeline says having a better understanding of worldwide nursing and giving presentations in her classes prepared her for the opportunity to pass along her knowledge to many of the doctors and staff at Yala hospital.

    “Before this I was really nervous to talk in front of people,” she said. “But while I was in Kenya, I was able to teach basic principles and resuscitation courses to the whole hospital staff. It’s really changing me from the nurse to the practitioner role.”

    Madeline plans to pursue a DNP after completion of her MSN.

    As Mama Packs for Kenya continues to grow, its biggest needs are monetary donations or volunteer hours. You can donate here, or learn more about volunteering here. You can also find Mama Packs for Kenya on Facebook and Instagram.

    Due to poor staffing ratios, there is also a large need for nurses’ help in many Kenyan hospitals. If you are interested in using your nursing skills to serve the underserved in Kenya, contact Madeline.

    Thank you, Madeline, for going above and beyond the call of service and representing FNU with excellence!

    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 health care to underserved and rural populations.

  • FNU Asks AANP Attendees to Answer the Call to Service

    FNU Asks AANP Attendees to Answer the Call to Service

    FNU at AANP 2018A new wave of preceptors is signing on with Frontier Nursing University (FNU) as a result of many inquiries at the 2018 American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) Conference. FNU faculty and staff traveled to the Denver Convention Center on June 27-30 for the annual AANP event. For three days FNU exhibited at its booth, displaying information and taking inquiries.

    With over 3,000 in attendance, FNU received dozens of inquiries as to how attendees could become involved in precepting at FNU.

    FNU Exhibit Hall booth
    FNU Exhibit Hall booth

    As most of the AANP conference attendees are nurse practitioners (NPs), FNU faculty are encouraged that the NPs who inquired will become a vital part of the FNU student experience as preceptors.

    Other attendees expressed interest in Post-Graduate certificates and FNU’s DNP program.

    Throughout the conference, several FNU faculty members and students presented posters and presentations:

    • Poster: “The APN: Resources in the Face of Disaster”

    Presenters: Dr. Diane John, Dr. Kate Moriarty, Dr. Charlotte Morris, Tamara Vasquez

    • Presentation: “Rapid Fire: Caring for LGBT Patients: The Call for Culturally Competent Care”

    Presenters: Dr. Joanne Keefe and Dr. Amber Littlefield

    • "Innovation in Care: Bringing Behavioral Health Services to the Primary Care Setting" presented by April Dobroth
      “Innovation in Care: Bringing Behavioral Health Services to the Primary Care Setting” presented by April Dobroth

      Poster: “Innovation in Care: Bringing Behavioral Health Services to the Primary Care Setting”

    Presenter: Dr. April Dobroth

    • Poster: “Medical Mission Revival: Meeting Unmet Medical Needs in Underserved, Underprivileged Areas of the U.S. While Providing NP Students an Innovative Clinical Experience”

    Presenters: Dr. Stephanie Collins and Dr. Melanie Morrison

    Students Neander Tobingo and Jennifer McCammond, FNU PRIDE Ambassadors
    Students Neander Tobingo and Jennifer McCammond, FNU PRIDE Ambassadors

    Two FNU students, Neander Tabingo and Jennifer McCammond, represented the PRIDE program and were integral in running the FNU booth.  

    During the conference, FNU also engaged its extensive network with a breakfast, inviting all Frontier alumni, students, faculty and preceptors to attend. FNU Clinical Director Dr. Irma Jordan and Associate Dean of Family Nursing Dr. Lisa Chappell spoke to the group of more than 40 who attended.

    FNU Alumni and Friends Reception
    FNU Alumni and Friends Reception

    Brittney Edwards, Director of Marketing and Communications, took the opportunity to unveil FNU’s brand new Development VideoGenny Little was also introduced as Frontier’s Associate Director of Development and Alumni Relations. Her new role includes expanding the Wide Neighborhoods program, among many other items.

    To find out more about the AANP Conference, go here.

    See the FNU 2018 AANP photo album.  

  • FNU Diversity Impact Celebrates 8 Years

    FNU Diversity Impact Celebrates 8 Years

    FNU 8th Annual Diversity Impact

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) continued its initiative for a more diverse, culturally-conscious health care workforce through the 8th annual Diversity Impact Student Conference, held from June 7-10, 2018.

    Diversity Impact is hosted by FNU’s PRIDE program (Promoting Recruitment and Retention to Increase Diversity in Nurse-Midwifery and Nurse Practitioner Education). The conference is open to any FNU student who wants to make a difference in providing care to rural and underserved communities.

    The theme for Diversity Impact 2018: We Are One: Uniting Dreamers with Diverse Voices. The four-day program was designed with workshops and activities to help attendees explore how to fully experience, live and create meaningful connections within diverse communities.

    Presenters at this year’s conference spoke on mental health and cultural care, transcultural nursing and the current state of mortality rates in the African American community. The keynote address was delivered by Dr. Nancy López, Ph.D, titled Intersectionality: Examining Race, Gender, Class, Ethnicity, and the Results of Inequalities. Nursing students were challenged to foster their leadership skills to improve minority health among underrepresented and marginalized groups.

    The conference programming also includes interactive learning opportunities for attendees. On the second day of the conference, participants took a cultural field trip to the memorial site of the 1970 Finley Mine Explosion in Hyden, Ky., tracing historical events to further explore rural health in the Appalachian region.

    Another group activity promoted cross-cultural communication in an emergency environment. Student groups recreated the scene of a natural disaster or global epidemic and used artistic expression to inform an international population about a disease outbreak in a foreign country.

    To finish the conference, students engaged in collaborative discussions to address health disparities and find proactive solutions to improve minority health among underrepresented and marginalized groups. This year, the featured topics for the forum discussions were: environmentally-sustainable healthcare; mental health in patient and police interactions; and vulnerable populations and sexual IQ risk reduction.

    The 2018 Diversity Impact conference reinforces FNU’s strong initiatives to improve health care for mothers, babies and families. See local news coverage of this year’s Diversity Impact.

    Photos from the event can be viewed here.

    Interested in how you can get involved? Visit the Diversity Impact Student Conference page.

    Listen to recordings from the live premier speaker sessions here:

  • Courier Spotlight: Sally Hamby

    Courier Spotlight: Sally Hamby

    Courier Spotlight: Sally Hamby

    Northeastern native Sally Hamby was inspired as a teenager to serve as a Courier with Frontier Nursing Service (FNS). At age 23, after graduating college, Sally finally got her chance. In the fall of 1974 she headed from Washington, D.C. to Kentucky, a foreign state and a foreign culture.

    Sally was stationed at Flat Creek, an outpost center at FNS, for the majority of her time as a Courier. There she worked with Sue (Brezec) Krech, who was just 22 at the time and the only nurse-midwife on site. Though they had little supervision from the FNS headquarters, the pair had much responsibility for the health of their community. Together, Sally and Sue brought patients to appointments, delivered medication, dealt with psychiatric cases, and occasionally helped in the operating room.

    Though she did not pursue a career in nursing, the skills Sally developed stayed with her for the rest of her life.

    She learned to drive a manual-transmission vehicle in her many journeys to rural Appalachian homes. She grew confident in explaining to families why they needed certain medications and how to take them. She also interacted with new people weekly, serving tea and showing guests around Wendover.

    “The experience helped to shape me as a person in terms of feeling confident in difficult situations and in showing compassion,” she said.

    After her days as a Courier, Sally became a mother, teacher, writer and performing musician specializing in renaissance music.

    But many of the friends she made are still in contact with her 44 years later, and she has continued to support Frontier to this day.

    “I have remained involved because Frontier is an organization that realizes its ideals and doesn’t waste its resources,” she said. She is impressed with the way FNU has done much with few resources and shows innovation through each new circumstance.

    In 2010, Sally even brought her daughter to experience Frontier. With her teen, Sally traveled back to Wendover and stayed in her old courier quarters. They toured Flat Creek, visited Hyden and shared many stories.

    “Seeing the work of Frontier made an important impression on her,” she said.

    From Sally’s teen years to her daughters’, the legacy of Mary Breckinridge continues to shape lives for the better.

    You can read about Sally’s experiences as a Courier in the Autumn 1974 Bulletin.

    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 1,600 Couriers who have served since 1928.

    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.

  • The Benefits of a Nurse-Midwife Specialty

    The Benefits of a Nurse-Midwife Specialty

    Benefits of a Nurse-Midwife Specialty from Frontier Nursing University

    The Benefits of a Nurse-Midwife Specialty

    If you’re considering nursing as a career, you may have considered a nurse-midwife specialty. While nurse-midwives help pregnant women go through the journey of childbirth more comfortably and safely, that’s not all those with a nurse-midwife specialty are capable of. A nurse-midwife’s full scope of practice includes primary care, family planning services, care for mother and baby during pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period and treatment of male partners for sexually transmitted infections. But what are the benefits of a nurse-midwife specialty?

    As the recipient of a nurse-midwife specialty, you’ll be embarking on a rewarding career taking care of women across their lifespan – and there are many advantages for the advanced practice nurse as well. Midwifery care decreases the cost of healthcare while increasing positive health outcomes for mothers and babies specifically, improving maternal and infant mortality rates. As leaders in healthcare reform, nurse-midwives act as agents of change in the lives of their individual patients and the healthcare field in general.

    Why Should I Get A Nurse-Midwife Specialty?

    Studying for a nurse-midwife specialty means more than simply embarking on a career in this healthcare field – you’ll be starting a course of study that will lead you to make a positive impact in the lives of countless women. As a nurse-midwife, you’ll help women from pre-conception through pregnancy, childbirth and the post-pregnancy period, taking care of your patients and connecting with them on a personal level. You’ll also provide primary care including conducting annual exams, writing prescriptions and offering basic nutrition counseling to women of all ages.

    Certified Nurse-Midwives are very involved with patients and provide a high level of comprehensive support on both a physical and emotional level. As a nurse-midwife, you’re doing more than writing prescriptions and diagnosing problems – you’re providing emotional support to someone in one of the most important periods of their lifetime.

    Additionally, many people do not know that certified nurse-midwives attend births in a variety of settings. While over 90% of the births that nurse-midwives attend are in hospitals (according to the ACNM), a small percent occur in places like birth centers or private homes. Many nurse-midwives find work in private practices, clinics, birth centers, and hospitals to best serve the needs of women in their communities

    How Will A Nurse-Midwife Specialty Help Me?

    With a nurse-midwifery specialty from Frontier Nursing University, you’re giving yourself the professional preparation and certification to enter the field with confidence. Our Master of Science in Nursing degree program is a comprehensive approach to nurse-midwife certification, and we take the time to fill our students’ needs on a personal level.

    At Frontier Nursing University, we also understand that life doesn’t stop when you embark on a degree program – so we offer a variety of flexible class schedules and degree programs that work with your schedule.

    Start Your Master of Science in Nursing Degree Today!

    Becoming a nurse-midwife is an exciting process that leads to decades of career fulfillment – and even more importantly, helps you touch the lives of other women for the better. If you’re ready to start your degree, Frontier Nursing University can help. Our unique nursing and midwifery graduate programs let you pursue your course of study from your current location, and we make class easy to attend even on a busy schedule. And though FNU’s nurse-midwifery program ranks among the top in the country, its tuition – just $580 per credit hour – is among the most affordable in the nation.  

    Apply for your degree now – we’ll help you start your career the right way!

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