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State nursing board commends Milligan nursing program


MILLIGAN COLLEGE , TN (April 27, 2004) — The Tennessee Board of Nursing issued a letter of commendation this month to the Milligan College Bachelor of Science in Nursing program. The Board applauded the program and its graduates for achieving a 100 percent NCLEX passing rate in 2003, which exceeds the national average by 12 percent.

“We commend the faculty of the nursing program for this significant achievement and extend best wishes for continued success in the future,” wrote Martha L. Barr, nursing consultant with the Tennessee Board of Nursing.

It was the fifth year in a row that every graduating nursing student at Milligan passed his or her national licensure exam on the first try. The 2003 class included Carol Barron, Amanda Bartlett, Julie Bostrom, Amanda Hammons, Emily Pierce, Melanie Reed, Fran Rose, Sarah Steele, Allyn Welch and Salem Wood.

The TBN requires that 85 percent of an institution’s nursing graduates pass the NCLEX-RN, the national licensure exam for registered nurses, on the first attempt.

“We’ve not only met the 85 percent requirement but have far exceeded it,” said Melinda Collins, director of Milligan’s nursing program. “We are one of only a few programs in the state to reach the 100 percent mark and receive commendation from the TBN. And we have now done it five years in a row.”

Collins noted that the NCLEX-RN is practice-based and Milligan professors weave principles of the test throughout their curriculum. An additional course component was added to the curriculum in 1999, providing the senior nursing students with focused preparation for the NCLEX-RN, which Collins says has contributed to the pass rate success of Milligan’s BSN graduates.

This accomplishment is one of several successes the program has had in recent years.

“We have a tradition of 100 percent of our graduates being employed as they receive their diplomas, at locations such as the Duke Medical Center , Mayo Clinic, Mercy Ship, and locally at Mountain States Health Alliance and Wellmont facilities,” said Collins.

Mary Fabick, professor of nursing at Milligan College , also reported that 100 percent of Milligan nursing graduates who have applied to graduate school have been accepted to the school of their choice, including Vanderbilt, Case Western Reserve, University of Tennessee-Knoxville and East Tennessee State.

In preparation for the profession, as well as the NCLEX, Milligan’s nursing program is practice-based, explained Collins.

“Combined with Milligan’s Christian focus, our graduates are at an advantage to better understand and meet the needs of their patients,” she said.

Milligan’s academic dean, Dr. Mark Matson , said he is very pleased with the success of Milligan’s nursing program and its contribution to the college’s mission and to the community.

“Preparing servant leaders in the health care field is an essential part of Milligan’s commitment to the society that we serve,” Matson said. “We think our Christian liberal arts education, coupled with sound training in the health care fields, is the best approach for the changing needs of health care. Our nursing graduates are prepared to meet those changing needs. We are proud of our outcomes.”

For more information about Milligan’s BSN program, visithttp://www.milligan.edu/academics/nursing.htm


Posted by on April 27, 2004.