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Iowa Nursing Colleges
Nursing Schools in Iowa
Hamilton College* (Cedar
Falls,
Cedar Rapids , Des
Moines., Council
Bluffs, Des
Moines, Mason
City) - Practical Nursing
Kaplan
University (Davenport) - Health Care Management, Medical Assistant,
Medical Transcription, Nursing
There are three major educational paths to registered nursing: a bachelor’s
of science degree in nursing (BSN), an associate degree in Nursing (ADN),
and a diploma. BSN programs, offered by colleges and universities, take
about 4 years to complete. In 2002, 678 nursing programs offered degrees
at the bachelor’s level. ADN programs, offered by community and junior
colleges, take about 2 to 3 years to complete. About 700 RN programs
in 2002 were at the ADN level. Diploma programs, administered in hospitals,
last about 3 years. Only a small and declining number of programs offer
diplomas. Generally, licensed graduates of any of the three types of
educational programs qualify for entry-level positions as staff nurses.
We have a list of nursing schools with programs available to you in
Iowa below. Also please use the Nursing
Career Guide as a resource if you are looking for additional
information on nursing careers, training, job outlook etc.
Online Nursing Colleges
Kaplan
University (Online)
Kaplan University helps students looking to either
change or advance their careers by offering online flexibility, reduced costs,
financial aid assistance, and a fast path to a degree. The instructors at Kaplan
have the academic background and professional experience that allows them to
pass on real-world knowledge to their students. The degree programs have a curriculum
that is focused on career goals, and they feature various areas of emphasis.
Programs: Accounting - Alternative Dispute Resolution - Branding and Visual
Communications - Business - Business Administration/Accounting - Business Administration/Management
- Business and Communications Entrepreneur - Computer Information Systems -
Corrections - Criminal Justice - Database - E-Business - Elementary - Finance
- Health Care Management - Information Technology - Law Enforcement - Management
- Management of Information Systems - Management/Health Care Management - Multimedia
and Animation - Networking - Paralegal Studies - Private Security - Programming
- Sales and Marketing - Secondary - Teaching and Learning - Teaching Literacy
and Language - Teaching Students With Special Needs - Teaching With Technology
- Web Development - Web Optimization and Integration.
Jacksonville
University
RNs with an accredited AA degree may be well on
their way towards their BSN degree. Jacksonville University will award up to
32 credit hours for students with an RN license and a maximum of 64 transfer
credits from other regionally accredited universities and institutions of higher
learning. JU also accepts up to 32 hours through CLEP exams. Programs:
RN to Bachelor of Science in Nursing. Location: Online.
University
of Phoenix Campus - Campuses Nationwide
Since 1976, University of Phoenix has been a recognized
leader in adult education. Their commitment to high educational standards and
exceptional student service has made them the largest private accredited university
in the United States. With campuses in over 140 locations, University of Phoenix
has helped thousands of working professionals achieve their academic and career
goals every year. Programs Browse
all Programs.
Campus Locations: Find
a campus near you.
Liberty
University
Programs: - Arts in Religion (M.A.R.) - Business - Business
(MBA) - Counseling - Divinity (M.Div.) - Doctor of Education - Doctor of Ministry
(D.Min) - Ed.D – Doctor of Education - Ed.S – Education Specialist
- Education (M.Ed.) - General Studies - Nursing Degree Completion Program -
Ph.D. Counseling - Psychology (BS) - Religion - Theology Degree (T h.M.)
Locations: New York NY.
CAREER SPOTLIGHT:WOMEN’S
HEALTH NURSE PRACTITIONER
“My journey as a women’s health nurse practitioner (WHNP) has led to
opportunities that I could never have imagined when I began nursing
school over 25 years ago. This has truly provided me with the best of
all worlds, true autonomy and control over my own practice, the opportunity
to collaborate with experts in all walks of women's health, and, most
importantly, the opportunity to positively affect the lives of women
and their families. The distinguishing factor about WHNP care is that
it is provided in partnership with the woman, from a woman focused perspective,
and with attention to woman- specific assessment and intervention strategies.
Fulfillment, challenge, and variety are only part of this remarkable
journey. And here's why …”
Susan Kendig, RNC, MSN, WHCNP
Background:
Women comprise over one half of the U.S. population and are at the
heart of family health care. Women's health is affected by all of the
factors that touch a woman's life - her family, relationships, work
environment, spiritual values, and community. Research over the last
two decades has supported the fact that women respond differently to
wellness and disease than do men, and that gender-focused health assessment,
education, and interventions are necessary for women to be as healthy
as possible. As women understand more about the factors affecting their
health, the women’s health nurse practitioner is emerging as a key health
care provider for women throughout the lifespan.
WHNPs are experts in woman-focused heath promotion and disease prevention,
as well as managing chronic health conditions affecting women. Our case
management blends health recommendations with the realities of women's
lives, in order to ensure optimal health, while avoiding unnecessary
health care costs.
Nationwide, an estimated 12,000 to 15,000 nurses have completed the
educational requirements to become a WHNP. Although certification is
not a requirement for practice in about half of the states, more than
7,000 WHNPs have completed national certification. Opportunities for
satisfying, rewarding, and innovative WHNP practices are growing as
women seek health care providers who will partner with them in addressing
their total women’s health needs.
Roles:
A WHNP is a registered nurse who has advanced education and clinical
experience in women's health care. As a specialist, the WHNP delivers
comprehensive health care to women throughout the lifespan, with an
emphasis on reproductive and gynecologic health needs. The WHNP is well-qualified
to provide well-woman care, prenatal and postpartum care, care for women
experiencing episodic acute or chronic illnesses, as well as care to
men who have selected reproductive health needs or problems.
My story is only one example of the roles a WHNP can create. I became
a WHNP in 1995, after almost 20 years of practice as a registered nurse
in a variety of maternal-child, and women's-health-related positions.
My certification as a WHNP has opened many exciting doors for me professionally,
and has allowed me to build on my valuable RN experience.
As a WHNP, I am able to affect women's health in three major ways:
providing women's health care directly to individuals in my own practice,
educating new WHNPs through my faculty appointment, and by working with
policymakers through a variety of community linkages to ensure that
health policies affecting women are truly "woman- friendly."
In clinical practice, I am co-owner and co-developer of Women's Healthcare
Partnership, Inc., a unique multidisciplinary practice that combines
mental health, advanced practice nursing, and health education to improve
women's health outcomes and reduce unnecessary health care costs. My
business partner is a women's health psychologist. In our practice,
we collaborate with women's health care providers in addressing complex
diagnoses, such as high-risk pregnancy, postpartum depression, disordered
eating, pelvic pain, sexual dysfunction, and problems with menopause.
As the WHNP, I provide assessment, health education, and counseling
services to women individually, or as part of group classes.
Typically, clients referred to me have seen several health care providers,
have had several levels of testing and medication, and have multiple
physical and emotional symptoms. As a WHNP, I provide the following
services: 1) assess multiple health care records; 2) identify health
problems affecting physical and emotional health; 3) teach patients
about significant health issues; 4) develop a plan of care in collaboration
with the client and her identified health care provider; and 5) follow
up to ensure that patients have access to and use appropriate health
services.
As an educator, I am a clinical assistant professor at Barnes College
of Nursing at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, with responsibility
for developing the WHNP curriculum I have had the opportunity to design
innovative clinical components that broaden our students’ experiences
beyond traditional women's health care. Currently, our nurse practitioner
students, under faculty supervision, provide health education and assessment
to pregnant and parenting teens in three school districts, as well as
in a welfare-to-work program. We also work with a local clinic to provide
traditional prenatal and family planning services, along with "house
calls" to women who miss their prenatal appointments.
As a women's health advocate, I work directly with community groups,
policymakers, and organizations to address issues affecting women's
health. This has led to my appointment to the Missouri Department of
Health's Women's Health Council, vice-chairperson of the March of Dimes-Greater
Missouri Chapter, and member of the expert advisory panel for a national
Cardiovascular Health for Women initiative coordinated by the Association
of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses and the American Nurses
Foundation. This has allowed me the opportunity to be a founding board
member of two important community initiatives, the Teen Pregnancy Prevention
Partnership, a diverse coalition of agencies and individuals dedicated
to addressing issues affecting teen pregnancy; and the Maternal-Child
and Family Health Coalition. I have also had the opportunity to work
with managed care organizations and physician groups, helping them to
understand the benefits of working with Whaps.
Specialties:
Most WHNPs provide primary women's health care, which includes pre-conception
health care, prenatal and postpartum care, family planning services,
management of sexually transmitted diseases, well-woman care, care during
perimenopause and menopause, as well as care for women experiencing
episodic acute or chronic conditions. With additional education and
clinical experience, WHNPS are also qualified to practice in a variety
of subspecialty areas, such as infertility, cardiovascular health, oncology,
geriatrics, endocrinology, urogynecology, bone health, and high-risk
pregnancy, and to perform advanced technical procedures such as limited
ultrasounds.
Practice Settings:
WHNPs practice in a variety of outpatient care, long-term care, and
community-based settings, as well as in hospitals. Examples of WHNP
practice settings include primary care clinics, physician offices, community
health centers, hospitals, antepartum triage units, school and college
health clinics, health departments, business and employee health settings,
and nursing homes ¾ essentially everywhere that women seek health
care. Additionally, opportunities abound for WHNPs as innovative business
entrepreneurs.
Qualifications:
In addition to strong critical-thinking, decision-making, and communication
skills, WHNPs must also possess specialized knowledge of the intricacies
of how simply being a woman can affect health and disease. Nursing experience
in case management and incorporating the physical, social, emotional,
and spiritual aspects of life into health assessment, education, and
interventions is also critical in achieving optimal women's health.
The WHNP learns to apply ethical and legal principles to complex health
care situations and collaborate with women to develop health care plans
that recognize the realities of their life situations. Typically, RNs
entering a WHNP program are building on prior nursing experience in
maternal-child or women's health.
Throughout my nursing career, I have focused on women's healthcare,
practicing first as a staff nurse on an obstetrical unit, providing
labor and delivery, postpartum, and newborn nursery care. As my career
continued, I gained experience in outpatient care, specializing in prenatal
care for high-risk populations, including pregnant and parenting teens,
and women who are pregnant and chemically dependent. My experience also
included development of professional and consumer-oriented programs
focusing on maternal-child health, women's health, and nursing practice.
Some of my most valuable experience was in community health, where I
provided home visits for childbearing families. All of these experiences
have enhanced my WHNP practice and allow me to provide a whole-health
approach to women's health care.
I also maintain a traditional practice in a private physician's office.
In addition, my academic appointment provides me the opportunity to
maintain skills in developing curricula and other education programs,
as well as supporting practice in a health department and home setting.
Salary Range:
In 1999, nurse practitioners nationally earned salaries ranging between
$50,000 and $70,000 across a range of specialties, with an average of
$60,000. Salary ranges for WHNPs vary depending upon region and practice
site. WHNP salaries typically fall into the mid range of the spectrum.
However, entrepreneurial activities or specialized programs may provide
the opportunity for increased earnings.
Education:
Education of the WHNP includes advanced classroom and clinical preparation
beyond that of the basic professional RN. WHNPs may have been prepared
through a graduate program leading to a master's degree, or through
a certificate program. The WHNP curriculum includes education in general
health assessment, gynecology, obstetrics, common non-reproductive health
problems, clinical therapeutics, health promotion and disease prevention,
and the WHNP role.
Graduate programs leading to practice as a WHNP include a minimum of
two years of post-baccalaureate education, culminating in a Master of
Science degree in nursing (MSN). Several universities also offer post-master's
programs that allow MSN nurses to complete one or two years of specialty
coursework in preparation for the WHNP role.
In a certificate program, RNs may complete advanced coursework and
clinical education specializing in women's health that prepares them
for practice as WHNPs. Certificate courses do not culminate in a master's
degree, but do prepare participants for certification and practice as
WHNPs.
Associations:
Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses
2000 L Street, NW, Suite 740
Washington, DC 20036
(202) 261-2400
Fax: (202) 728-0575
Web site: www.awhonn.org
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