ECU and ECU Health partner on new nursing program to expand acute care workforce in North Carolina

GREENVILLE, N.C. (08/12/2024) — East Carolina University’s College of Nursing and ECU Health are launching an Adult Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner program, a new graduate-level certificate program that will prepare more specialized nurse practitioners in acute care settings across the state.

“We have a lot of nurse practitioners in North Carolina who are doing amazing work to care for patients in ICUs and other very demanding care sites. We also want to expand the knowledge, skills and abilities of current practitioners because the need is so high and the shortage of providers is so great,” said Dr. Julie Linder, chair of the Advanced Nursing Practice and Education department. “This new program will provide the didactic and clinical experiences necessary to meet the needs of our patient populations.”

According to the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, only 6.1% of nurse practitioners specialize in adult gerontology acute care. The aging population is growing nationally, along with an ongoing shortage of health care workers. The collaboration between the College of Nursing and ECU Health bolsters the health care workforce in eastern North Carolina, enhances health outcomes and increases access to specialized care for older adults in these communities.

“ECU Health values its strong partnership with ECU and the College of Nursing, especially in addressing the national health care workforce shortage,” said Pam Rudisill, vice president of nursing excellence at ECU Health. “Our success as an academic health system relies on bridging clinical and academic excellence to provide high-quality care to eastern North Carolina. Eastern North Carolina depends on collaborative solutions from institutions like ECU Health and ECU to meet the needs and improve the health and well-being of our region.”

ECU Health’s Chief Nursing Office will support their employees by offering tuition reimbursement as a commitment to support the certificate program and help employees advance their education and skills.

The first cohort of ECU’s Adult Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner certificate program will begin classes in Spring 2025. Students who complete course requirements on the recommended plan of study should graduate in May 2026. Upon graduation, these students will be eligible to take a specialty exam to become certified as Adult Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioners.

The application deadline for that first cohort is Dec. 15, 2024. Find application requirements and procedures, along with required courses in the curriculum.

The certificate program is a post-master’s program, which means applicants must already be recognized as an advance practice nurse. The education students will receive will provide them with the skills to work in acute care settings. ECU offers prerequisite courses if prospective students have not already completed them.

“We invite prospective students to contact us in the event they need prerequisite courses prior to beginning their core class work,” Linder said.

ECU’s College of Nursing and ECU Health previously developed pathways for the development of the future of nursing care in eastern North Carolina with the establishment of an academic-practice partnership, seeded by a $1.5 million investment from ECU Health over five years. This investment has provided the ECU College of Nursing with the opportunity to hire faculty and staff, and purchase resources to support students in the Adult Gerontology Acute Care Nurse Practitioner certificate program.

The first cohort will be approximately 12 students, with a minimum of six seats dedicated to ECU Health employees and other slots open to applicants interested in advancing their career in critical care.

ECU will join three other nursing programs in North Carolina to offer the AGACNP certification.

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