College pursues nursing program


 

WINSTED — The Laurel City is one step closer to having its own nursing program.

Northwestern Connecticut Community College (NCCC) is pursuing the addition of an associate’s degree program in nursing, which would become the first program in the Northwest Corner.

To date, the closest nursing program to Winsted is at Naugatuck Valley Community College in Waterbury. With a substantial nursing shortage in the state and a waiting list at many schools, NCCC officials are eager to land a nursing program in Winsted.

In Massachusetts all 15 of the state’s community colleges have nursing programs and there is still a shortage of registered nurses in that state. Connecticut offers just five nursing programs at its 12 community colleges.

Gov. M. Jodi Rell recently decided it was time to add at least one nursing program to the community college system.

"We intend to be that new community college site," said NCCC President Barbara Douglass. "We’ve had tremendous support from our legislative delegation."

Douglass said she is confident that, should the state and the school move forward with adding a nursing program at NCCC, the program will be quickly filled. NCCC currently has a medical assisting program with an active enrollment of 100 students. Naugatuck Valley Community College holds 12 seats open to nursing program students from NCCC on an annual basis. The remainder of the students must find alternative locations to acquire their registered nurse training, which often means a lengthy commute or even an end to their educational pursuit.

NCCC has been fundraising to acquire the private funds needed for the program. To date the school has raised $850,000 in a capital campaign with Sharon Hospital and Charlotte Hungerford Hospital making substantial donations, which Douglass said was a great example of the true need for nurses in the community.

"It is projected that by 2020 Connecticut will have the second most acute shortage [of nurses] in the nation and it’s an aging state with more and more health-care needs," Douglass said. "It’s not a need that is going to go away, I don’t think, in my lifetime."

Douglass said she hopes a new nursing program at NCCC will make a dent in the state’s nursing shortage. Should everything pan out, Douglass said the first group of students would start in the fall semester of 2009. While only 24 students will be accepted into the program the first year, the number will increase to 48 the following year and to 60 each year thereafter.

For students interested in the nursing program, Douglass suggested two steps students can take now.

Currently, NCCC offers three sections annually for certified nursing assistant (CNA) training through their Continuing Education program, which Douglass said will give nursing students a "step up in basic patient care."

Second, students can enroll at the college now to take core curriculum classes that will be prerequisites for the nursing degree. These classes include math, biology and psychology courses.

"The college has room to grow with our new building, brand new science lab and a nurses’ lab as well," Douglass said. "I hope we’re approaching not a successful conclusion, but a successful beginning."

 

 

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