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A BRIEF HISTORY The Evolution of the Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree

A BRIEF History

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The Evolution of the Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree. A BRIEF History. What sparked the DNP movement The focus on clinical practice vs. pure research Evidence-based practice – required research knowledge Other health professionals – Pharm. D., DPT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A BRIEF History

A BRIEF HISTORY

The Evolution of the Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree

Page 2: A BRIEF History
Page 3: A BRIEF History

What sparked the DNP movement • The focus on clinical practice vs. pure research• Evidence-based practice – required research knowledge• Other health professionals – Pharm. D., DPT• Multiple nursing practice degree names and initialsWhat gives the DNP movement impetus• Supporting professional organizations & nursing agencies • Institute of Medicine• Magnet Status• Health Care Reform• Research Data

Page 4: A BRIEF History
Page 5: A BRIEF History

Process and Activities – From early 2000s until the presentThe process of focusing on clinical practice first started in the early 1980’s with the first practice-focused nursing doctorate - Doctor of Nursing (NDs) - started as an entry level degree programAmerican Association of Colleges of Nursing Task Force on the Practice Doctorate in Nursing 2002 – to looked at trends in doctorates & recommendations as to the needs for & nature of these programsAACN released a Position Statement on the Practice Doctorate in Nursing (2004) - two types of nursing doctorates: practice-focus and research-focus - and the practice focus will be called the DNP

Page 6: A BRIEF History

PROCESS – Building Consensus

Got the National Professional Nursing Organizations on board (45)Convened Deans and other key faculty from major universities across the nationJoined the task force to write the Essentials of DNP Education (2006) – To be a transparent process• Secured information from multiple sources about existing programs, trends & benefits of a practice doctorate • Providing multiple opportunities for open discussion of related issues at AACN and other professional meetings

Page 7: A BRIEF History

I Remember School Nurses…..

Page 8: A BRIEF History

DNP Position (2004) statement about the benefits of practice focused doctoral programs:

• development of needed advanced competencies for increasingly complex practice, faculty & leadership roles• enhanced knowledge to improve nursing & patient outcomes• enhanced leadership skills to strengthen practice & health care delivery• better match of program requirements and credits and time with the credential earned• provision of an advanced educational credential for those who require advanced practice knowledge but do not need or want a strong research focus (e.g., practice faculty)• enhanced ability to attract individuals to nursing from non-nursing backgrounds• increased supply of faculty for practice instruction • bring about a transformational change in nursing education

Page 9: A BRIEF History

DNP Position (2004) statement:Key Issues to consider“Practice demands associated with an increasingly complex health care system created a mandate for reassessing the education for clinical practice for all health professionals, including nurses.”

Page 10: A BRIEF History

DNP Essentials of Doctoral Education for Advanced Nursing Practice: • Scientific underpinnings for practice• Organizational and systems leadership for quality improvement and systems thinking• Clinical scholarship and analytical methods for evidence-based practice• Information systems/technology and patient care technology for the improvement and transformation of health care• Health care policy for advocacy in health care• Interprofessional collaboration for improving patient & population health outcomes• Clinical prevention and population health for improving the Nation’s health• Advanced nursing practice

Page 11: A BRIEF History
Page 12: A BRIEF History

LICENSURE, ACCREDITATION, CERTIFICATION & EDUCATION - LACE MODEL

Consensus Model for APRN Regulation: Licensure, Accreditation, Certification & Education (LACE Model) July 2008Completed through the work of the APRN Consensus Work Group & the National Council of State Boards of Nursing APRN Advisory Committee ( The Players -- ANA, NONPF, NCSBN, AACN )

Page 13: A BRIEF History

• Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) is licensing title used for the subset of nurses prepared with advanced, graduate-level nursing knowledge to provide direct patient care in four roles: certified registered nurse anesthetist, certified nurse-midwife, clinical nurse specialist, and certified nurse practitioner. Legal titles – APRN, CRNA, CNP, CNP-Family

• Accreditation of educational program –a foundational requirements for accrediting programs that evaluation outcomes related to standards for core role courses and population focused core competencies

• Certification to follow established certification testing and psychometrically sound, legally defensible standards; national certification/licensure

• Education (name the 3 Ps on transcript, state population & APRN role, meet Essentials (MSN & DNP); meet national consensus-based core competencies (NONPF NP ), preparation across the health-wellness continuum

Page 14: A BRIEF History

• National Certification in a role and one population

• Preparation in a specialty area is optional & over and above role + population educational experiences (e.g., oncology)

• A specialty may not expand the APRN’s scope of practice into another role or population focus

Page 15: A BRIEF History
Page 16: A BRIEF History

• Implications for Licensing Bodies• Implement the APRN legislative language• Issue a second APRN license• License APRNs as independent practitioners with full

prescriptive authority• Ensure APRN representation on the Board of Nursing• Include a grandfathering clause for those APRNs

already practicing• APRN’s practice should not be restricted by setting but

rather patient care needs

Page 17: A BRIEF History

• Goal of the LACE model– Speak with a unified voice– Standardize regulatory requirements, including

licensure, accreditation, certification & education– Increase access to & mobility of APRNs– Ensure APRNs are prepared to assume increased

accountability & role within a transformed healthcare system

– Maintain or increase number of APRNs prepared to meet population needs, especially primary care

Page 18: A BRIEF History

• Consensus models has been endorsed by 46 national nursing organizations and all major APRN organizations

• Original Timeline: target 2015– State Boards of Nursing to have regulations and/or

legislation enacted by 2015– APRN education programs will be transitioned by

2012– Certification examinations will be transitioned by

2012-2013

Page 19: A BRIEF History

• AANA Position on Doctoral Preparation Nurse Anesthetists (2007)AANA supports doctoraleducation for entry intonurse anesthesia practiceby 2025

Page 20: A BRIEF History

• NONPF Statement on Acute Care & Primary Care CNP Practice (2012)

• Fundamental issue is that CNP competencies are not setting-specific. “It is inappropriate and restrictive to regulate acute and primary care CNP scope and practice based on settings. Regulation should be based on educational preparation, certification , and score of practice.”

• Patient care needs defines acute & primary care CNP scope of practice

Page 21: A BRIEF History
Page 22: A BRIEF History

DOCTOR OF NURSING PRACTICE

Schools of Nursing DNP ConsortiumCSU Fullerton, Long Beach and Los Angeles

Page 23: A BRIEF History

Background• 2004 American Association of Colleges of Nursing

Position Statement on the Practice Doctorate

• 2008 CSU Chancellor’s Nursing Doctorate Study

• 2010 Institute of Medicine Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health

• 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act

Page 24: A BRIEF History

Authority• Assembly Bill 867 authorized CSU to grant

doctorates in physical therapy and nursing• California Code of Regulations Title 5 revised and

Chancellor’s Executive Order established to direct DNP curriculum and other degree requirements

• Chancellor selected CSUF to lead a consortium along with CSULB and CSULA; SJS and Fresno are offering a joint DNP degree in Northern CA

Page 25: A BRIEF History

Support• Strong external support for CSU’s DNP– Legislature– Policy Makers in Health Care– Clinical Partners in Nursing Education– Employers

• Strong potential student interest

Page 26: A BRIEF History

Systemwide Collaborative Effort• Northern & Southern California Consortia• Unified model in the CSU – conference calls, meetings,

nursing consultants• Brought in University Administrators and faculty; budget staff• Assessment standards, outcome measures, reporting back to

the Legislative Analyst Office• Review process – BOT, Academic Senates, Curriculum Review

Committees; MOUs• WASC – substantive change, CCNE

Page 27: A BRIEF History

Consortium Model• Capitalizes on existing strengths in nursing

specializations, such as nurse-midwifery and nurse anesthesia

• Builds doctoral education capacity across each CSU School of Nursing in the consortium

• Centralized admission and enrollment with input from each campus

Page 28: A BRIEF History

• Faculty and students interact throughout the DNP Core classes– Evaluation and Measurement– Leadership and Management– Faculty Development

• Move to specialization in Clinical Practicum and culminating Clinical Practice and Scholarship– Cross-campus participation in doctoral project

committees is envisioned

Page 29: A BRIEF History
Page 30: A BRIEF History

Cal State Fullerton Cal State Long Beach Cal State Los Angeles

Nurse Practitioner (Women’s Health Care)

Nurse Practitioner (Adult-Geriatric, Family, Pediatric, Psych-Mental Health, and Women’s Health Care)

Nurse Practitioner (Acute, Adult, Family, and Psych-Mental Health)

Nurse Midwifery Clinical Nurse Specialist

Nurse Anesthesia Community Health

Nursing Leadership Nursing Leadership Nursing Leadership

Page 31: A BRIEF History

Nature of the DNP Degree• Post-master’s degree • 5 semester, 36 unit program• 1000 hours of clinical practice• Meets AACN accreditation requirements and

legislative requirements to prepare nurse educators

• Scholarly Doctoral Project—3 semester Integrative Clinical Scholarship course embedded in the clinical setting

Page 32: A BRIEF History

Cost of Attendance 9 month school year

Fees* $14,100**

Books and Supplies 1,656

Room/Board 12,000

Misc. 2,900

Transportation 1,300

Total $33,956

*Note: All CSU tuition fees listed are estimates that are subject to change upon approval by the CSU Board of Trustees.

** Semester Tuition and Nursing Fee are $7,050 each semester, regardless of number of units taken. There are other student fees, such as Health Center, which are not included in this amount.

Page 33: A BRIEF History

Study Plan• Evaluation and Measurement 12 units• Management and Leadership 6 units• Clinical Practicum 3 units minimum• Faculty Development 6-9 units• Doctoral Project 9 units• Qualifying Doctoral Assessment end of year 1• Doctoral Project Defense end of year 2