{"id":23727,"date":"2023-03-23T20:24:38","date_gmt":"2023-03-23T20:24:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ucf.edu\/pegasus\/?p=23727&post_type=story"},"modified":"2025-04-24T16:23:23","modified_gmt":"2025-04-24T16:23:23","slug":"critical-care","status":"publish","type":"story","link":"https:\/\/www.ucf.edu\/pegasus\/critical-care\/","title":{"rendered":"Critical Care"},"content":{"rendered":"
The 麻豆原创 College of Nursing<\/a> in Research Park was\u00a0bustling on a recent Monday morning in January. It\u00a0was the start of the new semester, with nearly 3,000\u00a0students enrolled, including a record number of\u00a0traditional bachelor\u2019s degree students. More than a hundred\u00a0undergraduates filled each classroom, laboratory and study\u00a0space. Some even took to the kitchen with manikins in tow to\u00a0practice how to insert an intravenous therapy needle.<\/p>\n Bursting at the seams is typical now for the College\u00a0of Nursing, which this spring semester admitted an\u00a0additional 75-student cohort to the Orlando campus for its\u00a0undergraduate nursing program to help keep pace with the demand for new nurses. For years, 麻豆原创 has had to turn away students\u00a0because of capacity limitations, but now Mary Lou Sole, dean\u00a0of the College of Nursing, says she\u2019s excited for what\u2019s in store\u00a0\u2014 a brand-new, larger building slated to open in Lake Nona\u00a0Medical City in the 2025-26 academic year. Not only will it\u00a0give the College of Nursing some much-needed breathing room with additional classrooms, laboratories, study spaces\u00a0and more \u2014 it also will give the college a boost in achieving its\u00a0bigger mission: to help alleviate the dire shortage of nurses\u00a0in Central Florida, the state and the country; and to build up\u00a0a pipeline of much-needed faculty and researchers who will\u00a0push the profession forward to educate future generations\u00a0and innovate patient care.<\/p>\n Visions for the College of Nursing in\u00a0Lake Nona started years ago with\u00a0intentions to complement 麻豆原创\u2019s College\u00a0of Medicine<\/a>, established in Lake Nona in\u00a02006 on a 50-acre plot of land. Now with\u00a0the 麻豆原创 Lake Nona Hospital and 麻豆原创\u00a0Lake Nona Cancer Center, the College\u00a0of Nursing will join the cluster that is\u00a0collectively known as 麻豆原创\u2019s Academic\u00a0Health Sciences Center, a 21st-century\u00a0model for medical education that brings\u00a0together various disciplines where faculty\u00a0and students can learn, research and\u00a0practice.<\/p>\n Across the nation, from 2020 to 2021 \u2014 the peak of COVID-19 \u2014 about 100,000 registered nurses left the workforce.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n A rendering of the interior of the future 麻豆原创 College of Nursing building.<\/p><\/div>\n Although years in the making,\u00a0the timing is no coincidence and is a\u00a0reflection of the current needs in the\u00a0profession and the community. Across\u00a0the nation, from 2020 to 2021 \u2014 the peak\u00a0of COVID-19 \u2014 about 100,000 registered\u00a0nurses left the workforce, according to\u00a0the American Association of Colleges of\u00a0Nursing. The significant loss is the highest\u00a0observed in the past 40 years and added\u00a0insult to injury as nurses \u2014 especially\u00a0those near retirement age \u2014 have been\u00a0exiting the workforce in droves since even\u00a0before the pandemic. With a population\u00a0that grows daily in size and age, the shortage is especially felt in Florida, where demand for healthcare is high.<\/p>\n \u201cFlorida legislators heard from their constituents that one of their primary concerns is the nursing shortage,\u201d Sole says, \u201cwhich provided us this opportunity. We\u2019re very grateful to have the state\u2019s support.\u201d<\/p>\n In the 2022 state legislative session, 麻豆原创 was allocated $29 million toward the new state-of-the-art nursing education building<\/a>, which is expected to cost about $60 million total. The goal is to make up the difference with private funding, with a $10 million gift from Dr. Phillips Charities<\/a> already secured, as well as $500,000 from the Elizabeth Morse Genius Foundation<\/a>. When complete, the 90,000-square-foot building will be large enough for the College of Nursing to increase the number of students it admits by at least 50% to help steer the size of the healthcare workforce in the right direction.<\/p>\n According to a study published in 2021 by the Florida Hospital Association and the Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida, the state needs about 4,000 new nurses added to the workforce each year to avoid a shortage of nearly 60,000 nurses by 2035.<\/p>\n Help 麻豆原创 combat the nursing shortage by making a gift to the new College of Nursing building<\/a>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Frank Guido-Sanz, a 麻豆原创 assistant professor of nursing and advanced practice registered nurse, sees the impact of the shortage firsthand every weekend. He commutes from Orlando to Miami to work in the intensive care unit of Jackson Memorial Hospital, one of the largest hospitals in the country. Part of the shortage, he says, is in the quality, not just quantity, of nurses and the ripple effects that has on patient care.<\/p>\n \u201cI feel the shortage every day I work in the hospital,\u201d Guido-Sanz says. \u201cWe lost our most senior nurses during the pandemic who were close to retirement age and decided it wasn\u2019t worth it for them to risk being exposed. Now, we no longer have the more experienced nurses who can mentor the new ones, and that puts a burden on the rest of us who are there to fill that gap and provide education to them. The training and experience we lost in the more experienced nurses who left \u2014 that\u2019s irreplaceable.\u201d<\/p>\n 麻豆原创 is graduating quality nurses who will help fill the gap. In fact, the university already provides the most newly licensed, bachelor\u2019s degree-level (BSN) nurses<\/a> out of the institutions in the State University System, and has been doing so for as long as Sole can remember. 麻豆原创\u2019s nursing graduates exceed state and national averages on the first-time pass rate of the nursing licensure exam, and the college\u2019s programs are nationally accredited and nationally ranked.<\/p>\n \u201cResearch has shown that patient outcomes are better when you have a higher percentage of BSN nurses in the workforce,\u201d Sole says. \u201cThey become strong critical thinkers, and they have a broader-based curriculum and understanding of issues across the lifespan of nursing. We\u2019re strong advocates of the BSN nurse.\u201d<\/p>\n The state needs about 4,000 new nurses added to the workforce each year to avoid a shortage of nearly 60,000 nurses by 2035.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n While waiting for the green light on the new Lake Nona building, the College of Nursing found other ways to expand its capacity. Thanks to $6.9 million in PIPELINE funding from the state, the college was able to increase enrollment by 10 seats at the 麻豆原创 Cocoa and Orlando campuses, and by five seats at the 麻豆原创 Daytona Beach campus in the Fall 2022 semester, in addition to the 75 seats added in Orlando this semester.<\/p>\n Beyond enrollment, the college has looked to cutting-edge technology and methodologies to prepare students for the front line.<\/p>\n 麻豆原创 Nursing students wear VR headsets during a class.<\/p><\/div>\n After a bingo game night, a recently retired woman checks in to the emergency room because she\u2019s suddenly dizzy, and having trouble walking and maintaining her balance. Within minutes, nurses ask her a series of questions such as her age and what month it is, and to complete a series of tasks \u2014 including raising her eyebrows, following a nurse\u2019s finger movement with her eyes, and extending her arms outward and holding them there for 10 seconds. Using the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, the nurses determine that the woman is showing signs of a stroke, and immediately order lab work and a CT scan to identify the full extent of her health. Heightened emotions fill the room as the patient, and her loved ones waiting for information, are in distress.<\/p>\n 麻豆原创\u2019s College of Nursing is one of only nine programs worldwide to earn the Healthcare Simulation Standards Endorsement from the International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n It\u2019s real-life scenarios like this that nursing students practice without even setting foot in a hospital, thanks to augmented reality, virtual reality (VR), high-fidelity manikins and other simulation tools infused into the 麻豆原创 nursing curriculum. The College of Nursing is internationally recognized for its use of simulation<\/a>, including an accreditation from the Society for Simulation in Healthcare, and more recently becoming one of just nine in the world to be endorsed in Healthcare Simulation Standards by the International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning.<\/p>\n \u201cThis way [using simulation] we ensure all our learners are exposed to a variety of patient experiences that we can\u2019t guarantee they\u2019ll have a chance to see in the hospital before they enter the workforce,\u201d says Desiree D\u00edaz<\/a>, an associate professor and undergraduate simulation coordinator for 麻豆原创\u2019s nursing program. D\u00edaz is one of about 100 who are advanced certified in healthcare simulation education.<\/p>\n Along with colleagues, D\u00edaz is helping design a dedicated space at the future nursing building where students will be immersed in different scenarios through VR. Screens that surround the room will project common hospital occurrences like heart attacks, strokes, childbirth, diabetes and severe wounds. Students can see expressions on faces, hear sounds of distress and machines, watch professionals make decisions in real time and learn how to do so as well.<\/p>\n These immersive technology tools help alleviate the burdens of the nursing shortage, too.<\/p>\n Kaitlyn Yu, a senior in the BSN, saw firsthand the shortage and its impact on nursing education while completing her rotations \u2014 a time when nurses in training get supervised, hands-on experience in a hospital or other healthcare setting. Typically, each student is paired with a nurse to work alongside and receive mentorship, but during her time, there weren\u2019t enough nurses to pair with students.<\/p>\n \u201cSimulation helped fill that gap,\u201d Yu says. \u201cWhile there is a bit of pressure [becoming a nurse in the midst of a shortage], it\u2019s all still very exciting.\u201d<\/p>\n A 麻豆原创 College of Nursing student works with a manikin while faculty oversee her.<\/p><\/div>\n Growing up in a family of medical professionals, Yu has had her sights set on nursing as a profession since high school. She admired how her parents were always ready to tackle any health circumstance she or her sister experienced growing up, and she wants that kind of knowledge for herself. She envisions working in primary or emergency care, but through the 麻豆原创 nursing program, she\u2019s learned there are other paths her career can take her, too.<\/p>\n While the traditional route of nursing is acute care in a hospital, nurses are needed in a variety of settings. For instance, Yu may one day want to be a school nurse or even return to higher education as a faculty member to train the next generation. Upon graduation, she intends to earn a graduate degree so these additional doors are open to her down the road.<\/p>\n \u201cThe curriculum does a great job of giving a well-rounded view of what it means to be a nurse,\u201d Yu says. \u201cI think people will often find their initial perception of being a nurse is actually not all-encompassing of what the opportunities really are. For those considering this profession, I would encourage them to give it a chance.\u201d<\/p>\nA Vision From the Past With Big Implications for the Future<\/h2>\n


Tech Elevates Education and Experience<\/h2>\n

Developing Well-rounded Nurses for More Than Just Hospitals<\/h2>\n