
The Doctor of Nursing Practice program prepares nurses with the knowledge, skills and attributes necessary for fully accountable practice with patients across sites and over time. With the increasing scope of clinical scholarship in nursing and the growth of scientific knowledge in the discipline, doctoral level education is required for independent practice. The curriculum includes content which enables the graduate to conduct complex diagnostic and treatment modalities, utilize sophisticated informatics and decision-making technology, and assimilate in-depth knowledge of biophysical, psychosocial, behavioral and clinical sciences. The Residency and portfolio provide mastery and evidence of competency achievement.
Given the complexity of care, growth of information and biomedical technology, an aging and increasingly diverse population, and worsening disparities in care, the need for a DNP program to prepare clinicians to fill the growing societal need for expert clinicians is timely and necessary.
The DNP is the natural evolution and needed expansion of existing clinical degrees in nursing: the basic BS and the site-specific MS. The curriculum plan was developed with the intent of producing advanced practice nurses who can utilize skills and knowledge to independently provide expert nursing care in all care settings.
The Director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice program is Judy Honig, DNP, EdD, CPNP. The Co-Director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice program is Janice Smolowitz, DNP, EdD, ANP.
Interviews are conducted in March and April. Admission decisions are sent throughout April and May. Doctoral students are admitted for fall entry and as full time status only. Please note, applications for the DNP Program can only be submitted online.
The above Admission Criteria are current as of 04/24/2009 and are subject to change at any time.
| Support Core Courses | Credits | |
| N9300 | Comparative Quantitative Research Design and Methodology | 3 |
| N9400 | Practice Management | 3 |
| N9412 | Informatics for Advanced Practice | 3 |
| N9538 | Advanced Seminar in Clinical Genomics | 2 |
| N9600 | Legal and Ethical Issues | 3 |
| N9672 | Principles of Epidemiology and Environmental Health | 3 |
| N9910 | Translation and Synthesis of Evidence for Optimal Outcomes | 3 |
| Total Support Core | 20 | |
| Clinical Core Courses | ||
| N9480 | Chronic Illness Management | 2 |
| N9700 | Residency for Doctor of Nursing Practice | 5 |
| N9700 | Residency for Doctor of Nursing Practice | 5 |
| N9710 | Doctor of Nursing Practice I | 3 |
| N9711 | Doctor of Nursing Practice II | 3 |
| N9714 | Field Experience: Doctor of Nursing Practice I | 1 |
| N9715 | Field Experience: Doctor of Nursing Practice II | 1 |
| N9718 | Seminar: Doctor of Nursing Practice I | 0 |
| N9719 | Seminar: Doctor of Nursing Practice II | 0 |
| Total Clinical Core | 20 | |
| Total Credits | 40 |
The above information is current as of 04/2009 and is subject to change.