Dec. 10, 2020
Nurses specializing in senior care find graduate certificates a flexible option toward MN degree
During a year where the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the health-care system in unprecedented ways, an unfortunate but necessary result has been that issues in senior care, and particularly in long-term care, have been put into the spotlight. 听
For the first cohort of students who took the Contemporary Topics in Aging Graduate Certificate at the Faculty of Nursing, doing their graduate studies while simultaneously working the frontlines in the pandemic presented a unique opportunity where they could tailor their coursework, discussions and focus to timely issues they were experiencing at work.
- Pictured above: Instructors and first cohort of students in听the Contemporary Topics in Aging graduate certificate听in 2019.听
鈥淭his certificate offers a way to reflect on and improve your individual practice and a way of empowering yourself to think about what works in your system and how you might change that for the betterment of caring for older adults,鈥 says Dr. Lorraine Venturato (PhD), associate professor and team lead for the aging certificate.
The first cohort of students were nurses and health-care professionals, most of who continued to work while studying. Venturato says students found employment, received promotions, and started new jobs while in the program.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got people from acute care, home and community care, Health Link and long-term care,鈥 says Venturato. 鈥淭hey come from a variety of areas. Really, unless you鈥檙e working in paediatrics or midwifery, chances are, any area that you are working in, you鈥檙e dealing with primarily older adults.鈥
Clinical nurse educator lauds flexibility of distance learning听
In her current role as clinical nurse educator on the Rural Clinical Education team of Central Zone with Alberta Health Services, Susan Anning, BN鈥97, provides education to long-term care, home care and acute care staff on everything from how to start IVs to palliative care, dementia care and wound care. She currently lives in Red Deer听and is married with two teenagers.
Anning says she'd been investigating various master鈥檚 programs for years but was hesitant about moving to a city to do so and wasn鈥檛 sold on any other distance programs she had found.
鈥淲hen I saw this, there were three things that appealed to me: one, that it was distance education, two that it was U of C because I was familiar with the university and nursing department and the stellar reputation of the nursing faculty but the clincher was three, the stackable component,鈥 she says. Anning is a 草莓污视频导航 alumni who graduated in 1997 in the first class of the Calgary Conjoint Nursing program.听
RN says program fulfills 20-year goal of doing masters鈥 degree
The flexible online delivery format of the stackable certificate program is something that Deanne David, a Senior Services RN who works for the Calgary West Central Primary Care Network, agrees was a huge draw for her.
As a two-time cancer survivor, David has some damage to her peripheral vision, meaning she cannot drive. 鈥淔or someone like me, that鈥檚 another huge perk to be able to do this stackable program with my physical disability,鈥 she says.
David says pursuing her master鈥檚 this way is fulfilling a goal she鈥檚 had for 20 years. 鈥淚t鈥檚 formalizing all the things I鈥檓 already doing 鈥斕齪atient-centred care and evidence-informed practice. It鈥檚 what I had been doing all along, I just didn鈥檛 have the labels for it. It鈥檚 reassuring for me that I鈥檓 on the right track.鈥
While she admits at first it was intimidating to return to school as a mature student, and a big commitment, David says it's all been doable as she works Monday to Thursdays from home. 鈥淚t is such a small group and we鈥檙e all supporting and encouraging one another. There鈥檚 no competitiveness.鈥
Courses have real world-application
As a tele-triage nurse for Health Link, Katie Kirschner says she was most thankful for the support and understanding of her professors, who were available and accessible for consultation and feedback, something that was paramount during the early days as everyone pivoted to respond to COVID-19 in the spring.
鈥淲e have been extremely busy through COVID-19 so it鈥檚 an adjustment balancing school with the increased demands at work and my desire to serve my community with my nursing skills听during such a stressful time,鈥 says Kirschner. "They have been so respectful of the fact that we are adult learners that all have careers and other life demands.听You do work at your own pace and you have your deadlines set out ahead of time.鈥
Last year, Kirschner moved to Calgary from Fort McMurray to pursue her master鈥檚 degree at the 草莓污视频导航. While her original plan had been to apply to the traditional course-based master鈥檚 program, she shifted after learning about the stackable certificate at an info booth at the Gerontological Nursing Association Conference in 2019.听
鈥淚 was still trying to figure out how to go back to school full-time, while not being able to work and budget that in,鈥 she says, adding that the flexible laddered certificate was a better fit having been out of school for almost 10 years. 鈥淭his way, I could still work and it was still manageable and I could focus on areas I was passionate about.鈥
She already plans on taking the Leadership in Health System Transformation certificate next year.
First cohort鈥檚 final projects tackled COVID responses in all areas of healthcare
For their fourth course of the aging certificate, students complete a practice demonstration project which for this first cohort occurred in the spring/summer as COVID was hitting. Venturato says many students changed their projects to respond to what was happening in their respective workplaces.
鈥淢ost of the issues that students identified having, actually related more to the way services were delivered or the way things were structured,鈥 says Venturato.
David chose to explore why听there aren鈥檛 more nurses on the senior services team using the telemedicine system, although virtual care was established before the COVID pandemic. 鈥淚 know people who are well into their 80s who are very comfortable with technology where we could absolutely offer it to them and we鈥檙e not. I wanted to understand why.鈥
Kirschner opted to explore closing the loop around the reporting of Health Link calls back to family physicians for older adult callers so they were aware of their patients鈥 concerns and what they were being advised for follow up care.
Anning chose to focus her project around Advance Care Planning and Goals of Care after noticing how there was high proportion of residents in long-term care sites choosing full resuscitation听 鈥斕齛 challenge normally for older patients but especially so during COVID.
After she completed the aging certificate, Anning moved onto the Innovations in Teaching and Learning certificate 鈥 her goal is to complete her full master鈥檚 degree in three years this way.
鈥淚t鈥檚 given me new life in my career. In my mid-40s, it鈥檚 given me direction and purpose and something to be really excited about,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think this is a great idea for people like me who want to pursue further education but don鈥檛 want to quit their jobs and move to the city for two years.鈥
鈥淚 can see huge benefits for a lot of nurses, not just in Alberta but country-wide, when it comes to this program.鈥
The Graduate Certificate program is offered through 草莓污视频导航 Nursing鈥檚 Graduate Programs Office and is designed to provide advanced nursing practice knowledge and practical experience for registered nurses who wish to acquire specialized skills.