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The CLC Program

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Maya Angelou. Educating. Mentoring. Pioneering. CLC Program Leadership. Co-Principle Investigators ... Maya Angelou. Educating. Mentoring. Pioneering *Property ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The CLC Program


1
The CLC Program
  • College of Nursing Health Sciences/Partners
    HealthCare
  • Clinical Leadership Collaborative for Diversity
    in Nursing

Presented By CNHS/Partners
Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
12/08
2
  • We all should know that diversity makes for a
    rich tapestry, and we must understand that all
    threads of the tapestry are equal in value no
    matter what their color.
  • - Maya Angelou

Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
3
CLC Program Leadership
  • Co-Principle Investigators
  • Jeanette Ives-Erickson, RN, MS, FAAN
  • Sr. Vice President for Patient Care Chief
    Nurse, MGH
  • Greer Glazer RN, PhD, CNP, FAAN
  • Dean Professor, College of Nursing and Health
    Sciences, UMass Boston
  •  
  • Co-Project Directors
  • Gaurdia E. Banister, PhD, RN
  • Executive Director, MGH/The Institute for Patient
    Care
  • Marion E. Winfrey, EdD, RN
  • Assoc. Dean and Assoc.Professor, CLC Faculty
    Advisor, College of Nursing and Health Sciences,
    UMass Boston
  • Program Administrative Assistant
  • Jariza Rodriguez
  • College of Nursing and Health Sciences, UMass
    Boston

Pioneering
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Mentoring
4
CLC Steering Committee Members
  • Olako Agburu, MGH
  • Elaine Bridge, Newton Wellesley
  • Helene Bowen Brady, Faulkner
  • Marianne Ditomassi, MGH
  • Hallie Greenberg, BWH
  • Patrice Nicholas, BWH
  • Donna Perry, MGH
  • Virginia Ginny Prout, Newton-Wellesley
  • Peter Terres, UMass Boston
  • Rosalie Tyrell, MGH
  • Deborah Washington, MGH

Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
5
What is the CLC?
  • The CLC is a workforce development project
    realized from two grants from Partners HealthCare
    totaling almost 1M. This three year initiative
    is designed to achieve, in part, the vision of
    diversity by facilitating the successful
    progression of over 30 racially and ethnically
    diverse students through the generic
    undergraduate nursing program at UMass Bostons
    College of Nursing Health Sciences.
  • The CLC intends to supports the clinical
    leadership development of 37 students in order to
    affect a smooth transition into clinical practice
    upon graduation.

Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
6
What is the Vision of Diversity?
  • The concept of diversity encompasses recognizing,
    accepting and respecting that each individual is
    unique, with individual differences along the
    dimensions of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual
    orientation, socio-economic status, age, physical
    abilities, religious beliefs, political beliefs,
    or other ideologies.
  • It is the exploration of these differences in a
    safe, positive, and nurturing environment.
  • It is about understanding and moving beyond
    simple tolerance to embracing and celebrating the
    rich dimensions of diversity contained within
    each individual. (interbiznet.com 2002 )

Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
7
Why is there a need for the CLC program?
  • According to the Sullivan Commissions 2004
    report, African American, Latino Americans and
    Native Americans comprise 25 of the U.S.
    population but only 9 of the nations nurses.
  • The need for increased diversity of the
    healthcare workforce has been identified as a
    critical factor in addressing health disparities.
  • In Boston, the Mayors Task Force to eliminate
    health disparities has called for increasing
    resources to train, recruit and retain persons
    from underrepresented groups of color in the
    health care professions. (The Disparities Project
    2005, Boston Public Health Commission)
  • The Institute of Medicines 2004 report, In the
    Nations Compelling Interest Ensuring Diversity
    in the Health Care Workforce, noted that,
    Increasing racial and ethnic diversity among
    health care professionals is important because
    evidence indicates that diversity is associated
    with improved access to care for racial and
    ethnic minority patients, greater patient choice
    and satisfaction, and better educational
    experiences for health professions students,
    among many other benefits.

Pioneering
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8
Racial Ethnic Group Composition of US RNs
Population
US Population according to the 2000 Census (US
Census Bureau, 2001b) 284.4 million Number of
Registered Nurses according to the National
Sample Survey of RNs 2.7 million AI/AN
American Indian/Alaskan Native NH/PI Native
Hawaiian/Pacific Islander
Pioneering
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9
CLC Student Composition
  • Cohort I began in Fall 2007 with 18 students.
    7 graduated in 05/08 and an additional 3 will be
    graduating in 12/08. The remaining 8 will
    graduate in 2009.
  • Cohort II began in Fall 2008 with 11 students
    that are on track to graduate in 05/10. An
    additional 8 students were added to the program
    in Spring 2009 and will be graduating in 12/10.

Pioneering
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Mentoring
10
What are the Program Admissions Criteria?
  • Full time, first semester junior matriculation in
    the undergraduate nursing program
  • Racially and ethnically diverse students with a
    cumulative GPA of 3.00 or greater
  • A record of demonstrated leadership activities in
    class, evolving excellence in clinical practice,
    and participation in community activities
  • Satisfactory letters of recommendations from
    faculty members, work and community service
    organizations

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11
What are the benefits to the CLC participants?
  • Clinical rotations at Partners HealthCare
    Institutions and employment at a Partners
    HealthCare agency upon successful CLC program
    completion and graduation
  • Tuition, fees, stipends and assistance with
    paying for an NCLEX review course
  • One-on-One personal and professional mentoring
    from experienced registered nurses throughout the
    Partners HealthCare System
  • Participants receive a range of academic
    professional career support services to
    facilitate success in the baccalaureate nursing
    program and the workplace
  • Students learn and apply the 21st Century Skills

Pioneering
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12
What are the 21st Century Skills?
Life and Career Skills Include Flexibility and
Adaptability Initiative Self-Direction Social
Cross-Cultural Skills Productivity
Accountability Leadership Responsibility
  • The elements described as 21st Century Skills
    represent the skills, knowledge and expertise
    students should master to succeed in work and life

Pioneering
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Mentoring
13
CLC Student Comments
  • On this day we remember those around us that we
    are thankful for so Ill think about how blessed
    I am to have Partners and UMass believe in me and
    offer me such an opportunity!
  • - CLC Student
  • For the 1st time in my life, I am at a loss for
    wordsI get a call saying that I was placed in
    NICU at Brigham and I am absolutely in tears
    right now. This rings a familiar bellsitting in
    a chair at the NICU at Brigham is where I decided
    I wanted to be a nurse.
  • - CLC Student

Pioneering
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Mentoring
14
What does a mentor/mentee relationship encompass?
  • Establishing a mutually respectful relationship
    that allows for honest dialogue and reflection,
    focusing on leadership skills and succeeding as a
    diverse nurse at a Partners HealthCare agency
  • Mentors mentees maintain weekly contact via
    phone, email and in person where they discuss
    goals and acquiring/improving 21st Century skills
  • They engage in activities and mentor discussions
    that facilitate the acquisition of knowledge
    concerning
  • 1. Life and Professional Goals
  • 2. 21st Century Skills
  • 3. Mentors strategies for success in a
    Partners HealthCare agency
  • 4. Leadership opportunities meetings
  • 5. Partners HealthCare agency philosophy and
    how it is actualized

Pioneering
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15
CLC Mentor Comments
  • I would like the opportunity to give a newly
    licensed nurse the same nurturing and support
    that my mentor gave me when I first started out.
  • - CLC Mentor
  • It allows you to share accumulated knowledge
    and experience while gaining a better
    understanding of yourself through helping
    others.
  • - CLC Mentor

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16
What are the benefits to the Partners HealthCare
System?
  • CLC students will work full time as RNs at a
    Partners HealthCare agency for a period of time
    equal to the number of years he or she
    participated in the program
  • CLC students will demonstrate leadership
    abilities in a tangible manner (i.e., committee
    membership or scholarly activities) within their
    first year of employment at a Partners HealthCare
    agency
  • The CLC creates a close collaboration between
    academia and the practice setting by focusing on
    maximizing the potential of minority nursing
    students while in school and as a new registered
    nurse upon graduation

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Mentoring
17
What are the benefits to the Partners HealthCare
System? Cont.
  • The CLC fosters the professional development of
    its mentors as they take on the responsibility of
    the mentee - and encourages and motivates mentors
    to seek additional education and leadership roles
    within Partners
  • Mentors develop skills they can utilize as
    preceptors to new registered nurses
  • The CLC provides Partners HealthCare with a more
    diversified staff that will be entering the
    agency with an in-depth knowledge of Partners
  • All involved with the CLC promote the discovery
    of positive strategies for integrating diverse
    cultures in a setting that more accurately
    reflects the patient population that is being
    served
  • The development of a network of diverse CLC
    graduates who will serve as mentors to the next
    generation of diverse registered nurses
    throughout the Partners HealthCare System

Pioneering
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Mentoring
18
Where are the CLC students now?
Cohort I was established with a mix of juniors
and seniors while cohort II exclusively took in
1st semester juniors
  • COHORT I
  • Alessandra Adamo Graduation 05/09
  • Joanne Bodkin MGH
  • Channine Bun Graduation 05/09
  • Jean Martel Cothias BWH
  • Denise DePina Graduation 05/09
  • Ana C. Duarte MGH
  • Ervelange Exantus MGH
  • Frew Fikru Graduation 05/09
  • Alana Gurley In Transition
  • Kevin Kimani In Transition
  • Ying Law In Transition
  • Daphnee Magloire Graduation 05/09
  • Solomon Mugati Graduation 12/09
  • Silvianne Ngueya Graduation 05/09
  • Anh T. Nguyen In Transition
  • Maureen Pierre-Louis MGH
  • Alexis Seggalye Graduation 05/09
  • COHORT II
  • Neldine Alexandre Graduation 05/10
  • Larissa Alves Graduation 05/10
  • Jannine Austrie Graduating 12/10
  • Airiau N. Constant Graduating 12/10
  • Cintia K. Crespo Graduation 05/10
  • Eneida O. Da Costa Graduating 12/10
  • Renata C. De Carvalho Graduation 05/10
  • Anouchka Edouard Graduating 12/10
  • Farah E. Fevrin Graduating 12/10
  • Lyns W. Hercule Graduating 12/10
  • Joseph Valery Graduation 05/10
  • Trinh Nikki T. Ly Graduation 05/10
  • Ricky J. Pamphile Graduating 12/10
  • Kenelle Presume Graduation 05/10
  • Melissa Romain Graduation 05/10
  • Lucette Teixeira Graduating 12/10
  • Jessica Thai Graduation 05/10

Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
19
  • We all should know that diversity makes for a
    rich tapestry, and we must understand that all
    threads of the tapestry are equal in value no
    matter what their color.
  • - Maya Angelou

Pioneering
Educating
Mentoring
Property of CNHS/Partners HealthCare
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