USC School of Social Work launches new online nursing degree program
Graduates will help meet the nationwide need for advanced practice nurses in primary care settings
The USC School of Social Work announced plans to develop an online Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) for aspiring family nurse practitioners (FNPs). Program graduates will help meet the increasing nationwide demand for advanced practice nurses in primary care settings.
The MSN program, which will be called Nursing@USC, has a projected class start in fall 2016 and will be offered through the schools newly created Department of Nursing.
Using technology partner 2Us state-of-the art learning management system, the online program will provide registered nurses across the country the opportunity to participate in live, face-to-face classes with fellow students and USC faculty. Each student also will engage in multiple clinical rotations in a variety of health care settings to gain experience assessing, diagnosing and managing health problems across the patient life span. These clinical rotations will be selected and supervised by USC faculty.
The Department of Nursing aims to be a leader in addressing health care needs in society, combining the nursing professions traditional scientific foundation, holistic approach and commitment to competent care with the wide-ranging vision and expertise of social work. These unique capabilities will position students to apply new understanding of the biological, socioeconomic, psychosocial, behavioral and social factors that influence health to practical interventions on behalf of patients, particularly those in vulnerable populations.
The USC Department of Nursing will provide students with an unmatched and exceptional educational experience through an approach to nurse practitioner training that emphasizes nursings core traditions while infusing dynamic new fluency and consideration for the social influences on patient health, said Dean Marilyn L. Flynn.
The FNP curriculum will go through internal review and then be submitted for accreditation by both the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.