School of Nursing to Unveil Mobile Care Units with Community Health Fair July 19

School of Nursing to Unveil Mobile Care Units with Community Health Fair July 19

JULY 2, 2025 – GREENSBORO, NC — North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University’s School of Nursing will unveil its two new mobile care units with a dedication and ribbon-cutting ceremony followed by a community health fair Saturday, July 19.

The free events will take place rain or shine on University Circle, in front of the February One monument and Dudley Memorial Building, and in Noble Hall, which houses N.C. A&T’s School of Nursing – part of the John R. and Kathy R. Hairston College of Health and Human Sciences.

The community health fair is in collaboration with the Center of Excellence for Integrative Health Disparities and Equity Research (CIHDER).

Registration will be from 9:30 to 10 a.m., followed by the dedication, ceremony and program overview.

Each of the 37-foot mobile units is part of the Clinical Advancement & Resources for Expanding Nursing Education & Simulation, or NCAT C.A.R.E.S., program, which is designed to expand clinical experiences for nursing students.

“The mobile care units are a great new resource to the School of Nursing and will significantly enhance clinical training for nursing students  in underserved and rural community settings,” said Elimelda Moige Ongeri, Ph.D., Hairston College dean. “Additionally, it creates opportunities for partnerships with other university entities, such as CIHDER, and community stakeholders to advance health education on conditions that disproportionately burden the communities we serve.”

One unit, equipped with two private examination rooms, will be dedicated to expanding the School of Nursing capacity of clinical education, training and experiences for nursing students and practicing nurses using technology and simulation.

“It will be equipped with simulation equipment, technologies and patient scenarios that will allow our traditional Bachelor of Science in Nursing, Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing and Doctoral of Nursing Practice students to participate in these clinical experiences,” said Tiffany Morris, DNP, M.S. Ed., MSN, BSN, director of nursing and Clara Ender Adam-Ender Endowed Associate Professor of Nursing.

The other mobile unit will give the school the ability to further expand nursing students’ clinical education, training and experiences through direct hands-on opportunities by providing health education and services to the members of the community.

“The Community Outreach mobile unit also is equipped with two private examination rooms as well as a handicap accessible ramp for those with disabilities and a lab chair for collecting blood specimens for testing and screening,” said Morris. “As we thought about the future expansion of our nursing programs, the mobile unit will have the capacity to collect blood specimens for health screenings and provide privacy for health examinations and interviews if needed.”

The participation of nursing students in the services afforded by both mobile units provides uniquely different but necessary experiences that will allow them to obtain required clinical and practicum hours needed for their educational degrees and simultaneously provide the needed health education and services to the community.

“One of our goals is to reach rural communities that are faced with many barriers to optimal health as a result of challenges related to social drivers of health, such as lack transportation,” said Angelo Moore, Ph.D., CIHDER executive director. “N.C. A&T State University has established trust with underserved communities in the state of North Carolina. We will leverage this trust to provide appropriate health education, health services, and opportunities to participate in research that ultimately improves community health.”

The community health fair, scheduled from 10:45 a.m. to 2 p.m., will include tours of the mobile units, educational presentations and resources on topics including diabetes, high blood pressure, sickle cell disease, HIV, physical activity, healthy eating and nutrition, vaccinations, breast health, men’s health, brain and mental health, oral health, and community health programs. Free health and dental screenings, opportunities to enroll in the Guilford County Federal Qualified Health Center, massage and nursing simulation demonstrations also will be offered and vendors will be on site.

The celebration will conclude with a book signing by Clifford Ray Jr., a retired professional basketball player and coach who won an NBA title in 1975 with the Golden State Warriors coached by Al Attles Sr. ’60 and whose father, Clifford Ray Sr., also is an A&T alumnus.

Ray, a cancer survivor, will autograph copies of the children’s book, “Big Clifford Ray Saves the Day,” a limited number of which will be available for free. The book is a biography told in a series of poems that also details when he saved a bottlenose dolphin named Doctor Spock in 1978.

 

 

 

NC A&T State University School of Nursing Receives $2.36M Award to Boost Workforce

NC A&T State University School of Nursing Receives $2.36M Award to Boost Workforce

JULY 24, 2024 – GREENSBORO, NC –  The School of Nursing at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University has received $2.36 million from the University of North Carolina System as part of its Health Care Workforce Nursing Program Expansion Initiative.

The funding, which will be dispensed over two years, will support students and faculty in the school’s traditional BSN option, as well as the recently approved Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program.

The majority of the funds will be used to create a nurse-led mobile outreach clinic to promote health and wellness in rural communities in North Carolina, giving nursing students the opportunity to log clinical practice hours while serving the Triad area. The award will also be used to provide financial assistance to DNP students to serve as teaching assistants in the mobile clinic.

For the BSN program, the funding will support foundational preparation of pre-licensure nursing students. It will provide tutoring and support to students taking chemistry, a prerequisite course for all nursing programs.

 

 

UNCG School of Nursing Receives $2.4M Award

UNCG School of Nursing Receives $2.4M Award

JULY 24, 2024 – GREENSBORO, NC – The UNC Greensboro School of Nursing has received $2,420,118 to expand and enroll more nursing students. The funding, allocated from the UNC System Office, is part of the legislature’s efforts to increase nursing degree completions by at least 50 percent.

The School of Nursing anticipates expanding enrollment in the bachelor of science nursing program by over 50 percent in two years. In addition to increases in the pre-licensure BSN program, the School’s new prelicensure master’s of science in nursing program is anticipated to welcome another 70 students during that same time. The SON anticipates starting the new program and enrollment in January 2025, pending NC Board of Nursing approval.

“With this anticipated enrollment of new students, the funding will also help us recruit and retain as many as 18 world renowned nursing faculty right here in Greensboro,” said UNCG School of Nursing Dean Debra Barksdale. “Academic advisors, coaches and other student support positions will also be hired to assist these new students earn their degrees in a timely fashion.”

N.C. A&T’S School of Nursing Hosts Eighth Graders for Union Square Campus Tour

N.C. A&T’S School of Nursing Hosts Eighth Graders for Union Square Campus Tour

OCTOBER 31, 2023 – GREENSBORO, NC – North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University’s School of Nursing recently welcomed more than 100 eighth graders from Whitewater and Albemarle Road middle schools to the Union Square Campus to explore health care career possibilities.

The Union Square campus is a partnership between N.C. A&T and Cone Health, Guilford Technical Community College and the University of North Carolina Greensboro.

The students from the Charlotte, North Carolina, middle schools toured the Health Assessment Lab, Clinical Lab, Anatomoge Table Room, Apartment, Debrief Room and Prebrief Room.

“We know that nursing school is challenging and very competitive,” said Courtlanda Free, MSN, RN, Advanced Nurse Educator and Progressive Care Certified Nurse who serves as interim simulation coordinator and director of clinical learning for the School of Nursing. “We want to give students an early opportunity for success. We also want to encourage students that are interested and let them know nursing is a wonderful career and it is possible for them, if they choose.”

Free, other nursing faculty and current A&T nursing students led the tour for the eighth graders so they could experience direct representation of what the future of nursing can look like for them.

“I enjoyed getting to see the kids,” said Audriana Amos, a junior nursing student from Richmond, Virginia. “Their faces lit up while they were looking at the Anatomoge table as Ms. Free went through different parts of the body. They were asking a lot of questions, and they were really engaged, and I think that’s good because it shows that they might be future nurses one day or in the healthcare field.”

The Anatomoge is a radiology software device that offers a life-size digital representation of the human body by use of cadaver photos. The photos allow the visualization and manipulation of the human body so students are able to view its different layers from skin and muscles to the cardiovascular and skeletal systems.

The Health Assessment and Clinical labs are designed to emulate hospital rooms and are equipped with hospital beds, computers and materials that students would work with if they were in a real hospital.

The Apartment is a community health simulation with a full bathroom and full functioning room to customize what happens in the space. Within the simulation is a high-fidelity mannequin that operates with basic human functions so students can hear heart sounds, for example.

The Debrief Room is a hospital patient room simulation where participants’ performances can be recorded within the space and reviewed later for deeper learning.

The PreBrief Room is a nurse’s station where students can create care plans before operating within their simulation.

“All of the rooms are (designed) so that students can learn safely without fear of harming anyone or judgment and come in with an open mind and willing to learn,” said Free.

A&T alumna Diana Partlow, Communities In Schools director at Whitewater Middle School, coordinated the tour.

“As a middle school career coach, it is my job to expose them to different colleges and careers,” said Partlow. “I’m just so happy that our nursing department has elevated so much, so I was excited about exposing my students to the program as an opportunity for pre-recruitment.”

“I knew when I was about their age that I wanted to be a nurse,” Amos said of the eighth graders. “So, for us to be a part of showing them around, showing them what we do, I think it will influence them so hopefully we’ll have some future nurses because I feel like the career is always going to need people.”

Media Contact Information: eldockery@ncat.edu