Title: Transitioning Into a Doctoral Program in Nurse Anesthesia
1Transitioning Into a Doctoral Program in Nurse
Anesthesia
- Presented by
- Daniel Stairs, CRNA, MSN, MBA
- Assistant Director
- Excela Health School of Anesthesia
- April 4, 2008
2Nurse Anesthesia Education
- If you dont know where you are going, you will
probably end up somewhere else - Dr. Lawrence Peter, 1919
-
3Nurse Anesthesia Education
- Where have we come from?
- Where are we now?
- Where do we want to be?
4(No Transcript)
5Where Have We Come From?
- 1877 Sister Mary Bernard, Erie PA
- 1915 Lakeside Hospital School of Anesthesia
- 1931 National Association of Nurse Anesthetists
(NANA) founded by Agatha Hodgins - 1933 First NANA Annual Meeting
- 1939 NANA changes name to AANA
- 1945 AANA administers first certification
examination
6Memories From the First Certification Examination
in 1945 . . .
- "I Remember..."
- "We had been well prepared by our instructors
at Charity Hospital, so I did not find the
questions overly difficult. I did not take
anesthesia work lightly. I worked and studied
very hardthe examination was a definite step
forward. - Jessie Hood
- Charity Hospital
- New Orleans
-
7Memories from the First certification Examination
in 1945 . . .
- "I thought the examination was a good ideaNurse
anesthesia was a very hard job. I started at 250
a month and was on call every day and every other
weekend.The examination was hard, too,
considering the 9 month course I had taken in
anesthesia. It took me all day to write it." - Elizabeth
Coolidge - Grace
Hospital - Detroit
8Memories from the First Certification Examination
in 1945 . . .
- "I did not prepare ahead of time. Each school
taught what it wanted, because there were not any
regulations at that time. I felt the first
examination was a feeler to learn how the schools
measured up." -
- Gail Getway
- Grace
Hospital - Detroit
9Other Important Dates in History
- 1944 AANA membership extended to
African-American nurse anesthetists - 1947 AANA membership extended to male nurse
anesthetists - 1952 AANA implements program for accrediting
schools of nurse anesthesia - 1955 U.S. Department of Health education and
Welfare recognize AANA as accrediting agency for
schools of nurse anesthesia - 1956 AANA members adopt the credential of CRNA
10Where Have We Come From?
- 1987 Bachelors degree required
- 1989 1998, Programs start to transition into
Masters Degree - June 2007 AANA Board of Directors develop and
unanimously adopt a consensus Position Statement
on doctoral preparation of nurse anesthetists
11Reasons for Move Towards Doctorate
- Change in scope and complexity of practice
- Increase in required number of college credits
- Increase the credibility of the nurse anesthesia
practitioner - Completion of career ladder
- Increase the number of doctorally-prepared
faculty - Movement of other healthcare professions to
doctorate - Doctorate may be required by some states for
licensure
12AANA Position StatementWhere Are We Going?
- The American Association of Nurse Anesthetists
supports doctoral education for entry into nurse
anesthesia practice by 2025.
13AANA Position Statement Rationale
- Advances in technology, pharmacology, and
clinical practice mandate for evidence-based
practice - Healthcare is changing at a dramatic rate
- Informatics
- Systems approach to quality improvement
- Increase in credit hours already required
- Increase reliance on APNs to provide healthcare
- Some programs already moving to doctorate
14Where are we at TODAY?
- 108 NA programs in U.S. (as of 3-25-09)
- Vast majority offer various masters degrees such
as MS, MSN, MS in nurse anesthesia, MHS, masters
in biology - 2 doctoral entry level programs now in place
- 1. Charleston Area Medical Center School of Nurse
Anesthesia/Marshall University (WV) - -Doctor of Management Practice in NA
- 2. University of Minnesota NA Program
- -Doctor of Nursing Practice
15Where are we TODAY?
- Several schools offer doctoral completion
programs for masters prepared CRNA - 1. Virginia Commonwealth University
- -Doctor of Nurse Anesthesia Practice (DNAP)
- 2. Texas Wesleyan University
- -Doctor of Nurse Anesthesia Practice (DNAP)
- 3. Robert Morris University (for all APNs)
- -Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP)
- 4. University of Pittsburgh
- -Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP)
16Whats the Difference in the Initials?
- PhD is a research oriented degree requires a
dissertation - DNP and DNAP are clinical (practice-oriented)
doctorates - Prepares graduates to function at the highest
clinical level - Requires capstone project completion
- DNP program housed within a graduate school of
nursing - DNAP program housed within graduate school of
health sciences (outside nursing)
17Competencies for the CRNA Practitioner at
Clinical Doctorate Level
- For doctoral curriculum development
- Are 8 competencies
- Ethics
- Health Systems Management
- Public and Social Policy
- Technology and Informatics
- Practice Inquiry
- Healthcare Improvement
- Professional Role
- Biological Systems,Homeostasis, Pathogenesis
18Ethics
- Apply ethically sound decision making
- Informs public of role and practice
- Upholds Code of Ethics for CRNAs
19Health Systems Management
- Ability to analyze structure, function and
outcomes - Negotiates, implements, assesses
- Develops and implements integrated risk
management plan
20Public and Social Policy
- Advocates for health policy changes
- Influences regulatory aspects of health policy
- Evaluates impact of local and global political
change
21Technology and Informatics
- Uses information systems and technology to
support systems improvement - Uses systems/technology to evaluate programs of
care - Critically evaluates clinical and research
databases
22Practice Inquiry
- Able to assess and evaluate health outcome in
diverse populations, clinical settings, and
systems - Ability to disseminate research evidence
23Healthcare Improvement
- Uses EBP in clinical decision making
- Evaluates healthcare financing
- Strategic planning
24Professional Role
- Ability to undertake complex leadership roles
- Demonstrates leadership to facilitate
collaboration - Critical and reflective thinking
- Utilizes a variety of leadership principles in
management of situations
25Biological Systems, Homeostasis, and Pathogenesis
- Develops best practice models for nurse
anesthesia patient care management - Uses systematic outcomes analysis approach
26Our Plans for Excela Health
- Fall 2011 DNAP Completion
- Need to increase CRNAs with doctorate for
capstone advisors - Fulfillment of AANA doctoral competencies
- Time frame for completion
- Eventual program transition from MS to DNAP
27The Future of Nurse Anesthesia
- So what do you think???
- Are you ready for doctoral level education???
- Nurse Anesthesia Educators needed as we prepare
for the future of nurse anesthesia