Admission to the Doctorate of Nursing Practice Program is suspended effective July, 2018.
The Doctor of Nursing Practice (D.N.P.) degree prepares graduates to provide the most advanced level of nursing care for individuals and communities. This care includes the direct care of individual patients, management of care for individuals and populations, administration of nursing systems, and development and implementation of health policy. The D.N.P. program emphasizes practice-related consideration beyond what a student typically acquired during their master’s level education. The D.N.P. is designed to prepare experts in specialized advanced nursing practice and focuses heavily on practice that is innovative and evidence-based, reflecting the application of credible research findings. Students in the D.N.P. program generally carry out a practice application-oriented final project. Time spent on the project constitute the clinical hours for this program and generally total about 500 hours.
The D.N.P. course of study is targeted to individuals with a master’s degree in advanced practice nursing, e.g., nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist, nurse midwife, and nurse anesthetist.