Nursing grads to help ease mental health shortage

The UNMC College of Nursing is working to ease Nebraska’s mental health shortage.

The college just graduated its first class from a unique, new master’s degree, which enables them to address mental health issues, as well as the physical health issues of their patients.

The May 6 graduating class included Mary Scherling of Beatrice, Debbie Hughes and Kathy Havlicek-Cook of Lincoln and Kimberly Camp and Lyndsay Mattke of Omaha.

The College of Nursing received a $750,000 federal grant in 2003 to launch the degree that prepares nursing students as family nurse practitioners and advanced practice psychiatric/mental health nurses. The U.S. Health and Human Services Bureau of Health Professions Division of Nursing funded the grant.

Advance practice nurses are those with master’s degrees and advanced clinical experience who diagnose, treat and manage illness, including nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, nurse midwives, nurse anesthetists and other specialties. Some also prescribe medication.

“These advanced practice nurses are educated and skilled with dealing with both physical and mental health issues. They are clearly able to address both perspectives,” said Kate Fiandt, D.N.S., UNMC College of Nursing associate professor of nursing and project director of the grant. “We know today more and more that chronic illness are often accompanied by depression. The science is becoming increasingly clear that if we can treat the depression, that the physical health will improve.”

As part of the three-year program, students performed almost 1,000 hours of clinical practice.

The specialty strives to fill the gap of Nebraska’s health professional shortages, Dr. Fiandt said, especially those who cannot easily access mental health services, including those in rural areas and the urban underserved.

“This practitioner will be a valuable resource in Nebraska where 75 percent of rural counties are federally designated mental health professional shortage areas and 36 percent of rural counties are federally designated primary care health professional shortage areas,” Dr. Fiandt said. “Though there are some dual-certified advanced practice nurses with this specialty, this may be the first one in the country that prepares the nurse for certification in both areas at the same time. The state very badly needs people skilled in both.”