Jefferson Launches Nurse Anesthesia Master's Degree
Program
The Council on Accreditation of Nurse
Anesthesia Educational Programs granted accreditation to Thomas
Jefferson University's Jefferson College of Health Professions
(JCHP) nurse anesthesia program.
The master's level program will prepare registered nurses to
become Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs). After
completing the master's degree in nurse anesthesia, students
will be eligible to sit for the national certification examination
as the final step before practice.
“Jefferson's goal in offering a CRNA program is to address the
nationwide shortage of nurse anesthetists,” says Mary G. Schaal,
RN, EdD, professor and chair of Jefferson's Department of Nursing. “As
an academic health science center, Jefferson has outstanding
resources to support a CRNA program. Through the integrated program
of classroom and clinical instruction, students will develop
the didactic knowledge base and clinical skills essential for
safe and effective practice.”
“Jefferson has an illustrious nursing history that goes back
to the 19 th century,” says Michael Booth, MA, MSN, CRNA, the
program director. “This program is going to enhance that reputation.”
Students in the 30-month, eight-semester program will take 74
credits within three cores of study: a nursing core that includes
a research component, an anesthesia core and a clinical core.
The curriculum integrates didactic coursework with over 1,000
hours of clinical rotations, ensuring that students will administer
more than 550 anesthetics to patients undergoing a wide variety
of surgical and/or diagnostic procedures.
“Integrating problem-based learning is new to the nurse anesthesia
specialty,” explains Booth. “Building this concept into the curriculum
makes JCHP's program stand out from others in the area.” Patient
simulation and evidence-based practice are other important concepts
that are incorporated into each course.
Nurse anesthetists are members of the anesthesia care team composed
of CRNAs and anesthesiologists which administers the 26 million
anesthetics given to patients in the United States each year.
They are the sole anesthesia providers in more than two-thirds
of rural hospitals. The nationwide shortage of professional nurses
includes nurse anesthetists, and the demand for nurse anesthetists
far exceeds the available supply.
“The nurse anesthesia program is demanding and rigorous,” says
James B. Erdmann, PhD, Dean of the Jefferson College of Health
Professions. “We are excited to offer the program and begin answering
the demand for nurse anesthetists in the marketplace, and especially
in our partner institutions of the Jefferson Health System, particularly
Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals and Frankford Hospitals.
We are very grateful for their support, as well as that of the
Department of Anesthesiology of Jefferson Medical College, in
the development and conduct of this program.”
Twenty-five qualified students will be accepted
each year into the full-time, 30-month program which starts in
January. Eligible students must posses a registered nurse licensure
and have a bachelor of science in nursing or nurse doctorate,
among other specific requirements. Core courses can be completed
prior to admission into the program. For more information and
to download an application, please visit the website, www.jefferson.edu/jchp/nursing,
or call 1-877-JEFF-CHP.
Media only contact:
Jane Clinton
215-503-9865