WellStar, KSU enhance nursing partnership

Hospital to offer more training

Sunday, September 21, 2008

By Bill Hendrick

For Pulse

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HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

Dr. Gregory L. Simone, MD, president and chief executive officer of the WellStar Health System.

WellStar Health System has entered into a partnership with Kennesaw State University to enhance the school’s nursing program, develop WellStar’s future work force and make a dent in the severe shortage of nurses facing the nation.

“Kennesaw State University offers one of the strongest nursing programs, and the largest, in the state of Georgia,” Dr. Gregory L. Simone, president and chief executive officer of WellStar Health System, said in August.

“Combined with WellStar’s mission to provide high-quality health care services to this community, we are excited about the potential this partnership represents.”

KSU President Daniel Papp said the expanded partnership will help the university attract “the best and the brightest nursing students in the state.”

The university and WellStar will work together to recruit more KSU Bachelor of Science nurses to work throughout the WellStar system.

An adjunct faculty certification program will be established for qualified WellStar nurses, through which nursing students will spend six to eight weeks per semester engaged in hands-on training.

“This robust program will provide KSU nursing students [with] a more focused clinical training experience and help foster WellStar’s vision to provide world-class health care,” the hospital company said in a statement.

The partnership also will provide faculty development funds to retain nursing faculty within KSU’s WellStar School of Nursing.

Scholarships for undergraduate students also will be provided.

WellStar and KSU have collaborated in many efforts in the past two decades. The partnership was formalized in 2003 with the naming of KSU’s WellStar School of Nursing and the WellStar College of Health and Human Services.

“The face of nursing has changed over the years, compared to where it was when I started,” Simone said.

“Then, nurses just followed orders. Today’s nurse is an integral member of the care delivery team. Today’s nurse truly makes clinical decisions that affect the welfare and outcomes of patients.”

He said the nation’s nursing shortage is “severe,” but not as acute at WellStar because “of the support we give our nurses.”

— This article is a reprint from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.