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About Us
Founded
in 1929, the John
A. Hartford Foundation is a champion of health care, education,
research and service innovations that will ensure the vitality
and well-being of older adults. The Foundation’s overall
goal is to increase the nation’s capacity to provide effective
and affordable care to a rapidly increasing older population.
A crucial cornerstone of this goal is a nation-wide initiative
to build strength and capacity within geriatric nursing education
and practice. With the coordination of the American Academy of
Nursing and under the direction of Dr. Claire M. Fagin, former
Dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, the
Foundation selected five Centers of Geriatric Nursing Excellence.
The schools of nursing receiving these competitive awards were
the College of Nursing at the
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, the School
of Nursing at Oregon Health & Science University, the
School
of Nursing at the University of California, San Francisco,
the University
of Iowa College of Nursing, and the University
of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.
The
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Nursing
has built a 25-year history of geriatric nursing excellence and
interdisciplinary collaborative education, clinical practice,
and research. The mission of the University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences College of Nursing Hartford Center of Geriatric Nursing
Excellence (HCGNE) is to prepare a cadre of highly educated nurses
to care for aging baby boomers and promote their functional independence.
To accomplish this mission the HCGNE is designing, implementing,
and evaluating the outcomes of innovative interdisciplinary
programs in education, practice, and research and disseminating
our findings.
Examples of our innovations follow:
-
Educational strategies to
increase the number of geriatric nurses including on-line courses
to prepare nursing faculty to teach geriatric nursing content,
a BSN Honors program, a BSN to PhD track, and increased
emphasis on recruitment of students with a focus on geriatric
nursing into our doctoral program;
- Practice initiatives
to increase functional independence in elders including translational
research on falls best practice guidelines and partnering with
other agencies to implement and evaluate an integrated model
for geriatric care delivery;
- Research education and
mentoring to prepare nurses to conduct research that will increase
functional independence, quality of life, and quality of care
for elders including a Summer Grantwriting Workshop, 50% salary
support for a Faculty Research Scholar, a pilot grant program,
summer salary support for a Summer Faculty Scholar, and post-doctoral
fellows.; and
- Disseminating our products
to both lay and professional audiences through our web site
(http://hartfordcenter.uams.edu),
a Speakers Bureau, Interdisciplinary Grand Rounds, publications,
and presentations at the Gerontological Society of America and
Southern Nursing Research Society meetings.
As America ages, nurses will play a crucial role in meeting their diverse and
unique needs. By the year 2030, our health care system will be caring for a record
70 million older adults and geriatric nursing expertise will be more in demand than ever.
Meet 18 leaders in academic geriatric nursing who are featured in the 2010 Annual Report
of the John A. Hartford Foundation, and discover how they are promoting wellness; enhancing
community services; improving nursing home care; conducting research on elder abuse, hoarding,
and dementia; and preparing the next generation of nurses to provide quality care to our aging
society. Read more at
http://www.jhartfound.org/pdf%20files/JAHF_2010_AR.pdf.
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences | UAMS College of Nursing
D. W. Reynolds Institute on Aging | John A. Hartford Foundation | Webmaster
Building Academic Geriatric Nursing Capacity
Copyright 2010 by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College
of Nursing.
All rights reserved.
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