university of north florida brooks college of health
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University of North Florida Brooks College of Health. Pamela S. Chally, PhD, RN Dean. Our Mission . - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
University of North FloridaBrooks College of Health
Pamela S. Chally, PhD, RN Dean
Our Mission The mission of the Brooks College of Health is to develop competent and caring health professionals for the 21st century who are diligent in the pursuit of knowledge, make significant contributions to the communities and individuals that they serve, and become leaders of their chosen professions.
What Makes Brooks College of Health Unique? Hands-on learning experiences, internships, clinical practice, and networking opportunities
Over 1,025 negotiated clinical contracts
Transformational learning and study abroad opportunities
Study abroad programs in Paris, Ireland, Belize, Ghana, People’s Republic of China, Austria, Egypt, Chile and St. Petersburg, Russia
What Makes Brooks College of Health Unique? Dedicated educators, nationally recognized in their
areas of expertise Dr. Judith Rodriguez is named a “Woman of Distinction” by the Girl Scouts of Gateway Council and is the immediate Past President of the American Dietetic Association.
Dr. Lillia Loriz has received the Nursing HealthCare Hero Award by the Jacksonville BusinessJournal.
What Makes Brooks College of Health Unique? Innovative faculty and student research
Faculty, Michele Boling, awarded an NIH R03 grant to investigate risk factors for patellofemoral pain syndrome in military population.
Student, Stacey Enriquez, traveled to South Africa to compare HIV care in South Africa -vs- United States
Student, Rachel McCandless, and the Nutrition Club received the domestic projectachievement award from President Clinton
What Makes Brooks College of Health Unique?
Consistently high pass rates on national licensing examsRN Licensure Results – National 87.3%/UNF 94%Graduate Nursing Licensure Results – National 90%/UNF 100%Physical Therapy Licensure Results – National 86%/UNF 96%
Strong Partnerships with major healthcare providers
Community Nursing Flagship First flagship awarded in 2005
Why Community Focus? Nurses need to know where patients come from and
where they go after discharge.
UNF grads are prepared to provide care in hospitals, clinics, and the community through the integration of health promotion with care of the sick.
Accomplishments Stellar School Award from the National Student Nurses
Association, one of only 10 in the nation and the only Florida school
American Association of Colleges of Nursing Innovation in Baccalaureate Nursing Award
Florida Campus Compact Award for collaboration with Mission House
Accomplishments Numerous faculty/student invitations to present at national
nursing conferences
Many publications based on community engagement
Bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral nursing programs received accreditation without recommendations
.
Nutrition Flagship Goals
Goal 1: Expand collaborations with undergraduate students in community based learning activities.
As part of an engaged department grant, students are involved in the community. Goal 2:Prepare dietetic practitioners (Master’s and Doctoral level) who apply nutrition science and evidence based practice to promote health and prevent/treat obesity.
Curriculum plans are developed to meet nutritional needs of community populations.
Nutrition Flagship GoalsGoal 3: Convert the current Master’s coursework to distance learning format.
Faculty have begun to convert courses to distance learning format.
Goal 4:Prepare new degree application for a Doctorate in Clinical Nutrition (DCN) and achieve a sustainable clinical doctoral program.
Doctoral curriculum has been designed in conjunction with consultants.
What does this mean for BCH/UNF?
High quality nationally recognized nursing and nutrition programs
Expansion of the Nutrition MS program to distance learning and creation of the 2nd DCN in the United States
Increased opportunities to collaborate on research initiatives and share research resources
Initiated community nursing program helping to lay groundwork for Carnegie Community Engagement Classification
Plans for the Five YearsDevelop clinical doctorate in nutrition
Add allied health programs in conjunction with the local community
Increase use of simulation and distance learning
Increase diversity of faculty, staff, and students
Manage program expansion by responding to community needs within the constraints of available resources
Encourage research activities to improve healthcare outcomes
The Future is Very Bright!
Brooks College of Health