Our Maine Street's Aroostook Issue 38 : Fall 2018 | Page 26
“The University of Maine System continues to
expand enrollment to meet student demand
for our nursing programs and the demand
from hospitals, nursing homes and assisted
living facilities for skilled four-year nurses,”
James H. Page, Chancellor of the University of
Maine System, said. “Program expansions and
facility improvements tied to the University
workforce development infrastructure bond
will increase our Aroostook County capacity
to train the nurses and healthcare professions
our rural communities must have.”
The UMFK-UMPI collaboration comes at
an important time in the nursing field in
Maine. The 2016 Maine Nursing Forecaster
projects that Maine will face a shortage of
approximately 3,200 registered nurses by
2025. A major factor impacting that statistic
is age. The median age of Maine nurses in
2015 was 49; at that time, 10,984 nurses in
Maine were aged 45 or over, compared to only
7,764 nurses aged 44 and under. The Nursing
Workforce Forecast projects that Maine will
need to increase its number of newly-licensed
nurses by 20 percent each year to solve the
projected nursing shortage and avoid impacts
on care levels.
“The Maine Nursing Action Coalition
explored factors related to the nursing
shortage in Maine and determined that the
total number of nursing graduates will have
to increase by 400 more nurses per year to
fill the current gap. Each college or university
offering a nursing program will have to
increase graduates by 30 percent to meet this
demand,” Dr. Erin Soucy, Director, Division
of Nursing & Allied Health, at UMFK, said.
“Expanding our program to Presque Isle
allows us to graduate more students at Fort
Kent and help with that gap.”
In building this program, UMPI and UMFK
faculty and staff worked closely to ensure that
students will be able to complete their General
Education courses at UMPI, including
foundation courses in science. The goal is
to seamlessly transition them into UMFK
for their final two years of courses, which
24
FALL 2018
are predominantly live and online Nursing
courses, as well as Nursing clinicals.
As part of the program, UMFK Nursing
faculty will hold regular office hours on
the UMPI campus to assist with program
coordination, student questions, and advising
needs. In addition, Dr. Soucy will have a
presence on the UMPI campus to ensure
academic oversight.
UMPI is developing temporary lab space on
campus for a Nursing suite in Pullen Hall. The
lab will include four hospital suites to allow
students to practice psychomotor and clinical
nursing skills in a mock hospital setting.
Each suite will have a hospital bed, bedside
table, overbed table, human patient simulator
mannequin, and related equipment, including
a needle disposal system, glove dispensing
system, oxygen, and an IV pole.
“Having this lab space and UMFK Nursing
faculty on the UMPI campus will allow the
students in this BSN program to have the
same experience that students on the UMFK
campus are having, which will prepare them
well for the work they’ll be doing right here
in Aroostook County after they graduate,”
Barbara Blackstone, Dean of UMPI’s College
of Professional Programs, said. “We all see
this as a wonderful opportunity to collaborate
and help develop the healthcare workforce in
Aroostook County.”
“We’re excited to have this opportunity
to meet the nursing workforce needs in
Aroostook County and collaborate with our
colleagues at UMPI in increasing accessibility
to quality nursing education to the citizens of
Aroostook County, the State of Maine, and
beyond,” Dr. Soucy said.
For more information about the new UMFK
Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program at
UMPI, contact Patricia Armstrong at 207-
768-9532 or [email protected].