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Family Nurse Practitioner Outcomes

The Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) acquires a broad base of knowledge and experience to provide direct health care services to people of all ages for the purposes of health promotion, health protection, disease prevention, and management of common acute and chronic illnesses. The FNP focuses on care of patients and families and functions primarily in ambulatory care settings. The population in primary care family practice includes newborns, infants, children, adolescents, pregnant and postpartum women, adults and the elderly. There are a total of 42 credit hours in the specialty with 630 direct clinical hours.

The FNP graduate is prepared to:

  1. Synthesize knowledge from nursing theories, the humanities, and evidence-based scientific clinical guidelines to guide assessment of health status for patients of all ages.
  2. Demonstrate advanced practice clinical decision making, integrating critical thinking, to interpret patient and diagnostic test data and formulate differential diagnoses and a plan of care for patients and families across the lifespan.
  3. Design and implement a mutually agreed upon management plan and therapeutic interventions with patients and families across the lifespan.
  4. Evaluate and revise the documented management plan based on patient/family findings, problems and expected outcomes of treatment.
  5. Apply family assessment methodologies and research findings to improve and evaluate the care of patients and families across the lifespan.
  6. Advocate for patients and families to provide cost-effective, culturally competent, ethical, quality care in and across health care settings.
  7. Model responsibility for continued professional development, integrity, accountability, competence, and credentialing as a family nurse practitioner.

For more information regarding the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), click here. For more information on the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP), click here.

Program Curriculum for the Master of Science in Nursing - 42 Credit Hours

  • NURS 601 - Roles for Advanced Nursing Practice (1 credit hour)
  • NURS 602 - Evidence Based Practice for Advanced Nursing (4 credit hours)
  • NURS 603 - Theoretical Foundations for Advanced Nursing Practice (3 credit hours)
  • NURS 604 - Population Based Care and Health Policy (3 credit hours)
  • NURS 605 - Healthcare Informatics for Advanced Nursing Practice (3 credit hours)
  • NURS 606 - Nursing Leadership in Health Systems (4 credit hours)
  • NURS 617 - Advanced Concepts of Pathophysiology (3 credit hours)
  • NURS 618 - Advanced Health Assessment (3 credit hours)
  • NURS 622 - Clinical Pharmacology for Advanced Nursing Practice (3 credit hours)
  • NURS 654 - Primary Care Nursing of Families I (5 credit hours)
  • NURS 655 - Primary Care Nursing of Families II (5 credit hours)
  • NURSS 656 - Family Nurse Practitioner Practicum (5 credit hours)