Global Scholarship Alliance Provides Long-Term, Sustainable Solution to the Global Nursing Shortage
Global Scholarship Alliance and its partner universities and hospitals welcome international nurses for masterÂs degree, academic and clinical training. The four and a half year program is designed to help tackle the global nursing crisis.
Cincinnati / Brooklyn NY (PRWEB) April 6, 2005
Global Scholarship Alliance (GSA) today announced the arrival of 28 foreign nurse-scholars as part of the companyÂs innovative cultural exchange program. The four and a half year program combines intense academic study at an American university with part-time clinical experience in partner hospitals. The 28 nurse-scholars from the Philippines will pursue Masters of Science in Nursing (MSN) degrees at Xavier University in Cincinnati and Long Island University in Brooklyn, N. Y. GSAÂs mission is to help ease the global nursing crisis by developing the next generation of nurse leaders and educators.
Participants in GSAÂs program receive full MSN scholarships to American universities and are eligible to work part-time at a university-affiliated hospital during the period of study. Upon completion of the program, nurse-scholars are required to return to their home countries for at least two years, where they will lead and train the next generation of nurses as clinical instructors, nurse leaders, or hospital administrators.
The program is designed to benefit everyone involved. American universities receive additional masters-level students with full scholarships; hospitals receive an additional quality labor resource for four and a half years; nurse-scholars receive full scholarships and world-class healthcare experience; and the source country benefits from well-educated nurses and leaders that return to help develop their countryÂs next generation of nurses.
Susan Schmidt, dean of nursing at Xavier University commented, ÂWe are so excited to play a part in advancing the nursing profession globally. The education and academic training these outstanding foreign students receive at Xavier will directly improve healthcare in their communities when they return home. At the same time, we are able to enhance the diversity and worldwide recognition of our MSN program. Xavier has always been an innovator, and the program that Global Scholarship Alliance has put together represents a true competitive advantage for the university.Â
GSAÂs program also helps U. S. hospitals achieve their goals of maintaining safe nurse-patient ratios, and increasing staff diversity and continuity of care by reducing dependency on staffing agency nurses. The hospitals achieve these objectives within nursing union guidelines and without displacing positions that would otherwise go to U. S. nurses.
Ensuring Quality
The Global Scholarship Alliance selection process ensures that only first-rate nurses are accepted into the program. GSA carefully evaluates educational transcripts, licensing board scores, work histories and clinical experiences, references and background checks. Prospective nurse-scholars are required to possess a baccalaureate degree in nursing (a bachelorÂs of science in nursing or an equivalent degree), a registered nursing license in their home country, two or more years of hospital experience, and must pass the U. S. nursing exam, as well as a language proficiency exam. The nurse-scholars are then hand-picked by representatives from the universities and hospitals through face-to-face interviews in the nurses home countries. Those selected must also meet U. S. licensing and immigration requirements before arriving in America.
ÂGSA presents a totally unique, and dramatically more effective approach to solving the global nursing shortage, said Elaine McGuire, chief nursing officer at TriHealth in Cincinnati. ÂThe last thing we want to do is hire an international recruitment agency to drain the nursing talent from a foreign country. It doesnÂt do any good to improve our situation by making someone elseÂs worse. GSAÂs social mission is what attracted us to the program.Â
ÂMany Americans are unaware that the nursing shortage is actually a global crisis, stated Todd Bol, GSAÂs founder and current president of international operations. The current method of one-way recruiting from foreign countries to the United States and other developed countries is not sustainable and is harmful to home country health care systems.Â
ÂGlobal Scholarship Alliance represents a coordinated effort to improve nursing globally, stated J. William Deville, chief executive officer at Global Scholarship Alliance. ÂWhat we offer is a long-term, financially sound, sustainable and socially responsible solution to the problem.Â
About Global Scholarship Alliance
Global Scholarship Alliance partners with leading U. S. universities and healthcare organizations in an effort to improve nursing globally. GSAÂs mission is to improve global nursing by providing scholarships and professional development for future nurse leaders and educators, building alliances between leading U. S. universities and hospitals, and fostering the equitable distribution of nurses throughout the world..
The company facilitates cultural exchange programs and provides scholarships to foreign nurses who seek professional development through the combination of a U. S. Masters of Science in Nursing degree and academic training in a U. S. hospital. U. S. universities and hospitals benefit from a long-term solution to declining enrollment and the global nursing shortage; and through the requirements of the program, Masters-degreed and U. S. hospital trained nurse-scholars return to contribute to the education and training of future nurses in their home countries. The company currently provides scholarships to nurses from a variety of countries including the Philippines, India, Canada, and the United Kingdom. Global Scholarship Alliance has alliance partnerships in Kansas, Ohio, New York, Minnesota, and Texas.
More information is available at www. GlobalScholarship. net or by contacting Steve Albert, director of educational program development at 513-665-4544.
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