Nursing
Nursing - NURS
2000 - Nursing Success Series - 0 credit
hours
A no-credit course is designed to assist enrolled nursing
students to be successful in college and in their nursing
courses. Prepares the student to use available resources
effectively and improve their study skills and test taking
strategies. Additionally, the student will be introduced to
basic nursing skills, technology, and professional nursing
behaviors. Students will be required to have access to a
laptop for this course and future nursing courses attended at
Lindsey Wilson College. Course rotation: Fall.
2002 - Introduction to Professional Nursing - 2 credit
hours
Provides an overview of the profession of nursing in the
United States from historical to contemporary perspectives.
The student is introduced to the concepts and theories underlying
professional practice with a focus upon role expectations and
behaviors in accordance to professional nursing organizations,
including the American Association of Nursing and the American
Association of Colleges of Nursing. The student is
familiarized with the philosophy and program objectives of the
Lindsey Wilson College Division of
Nursing. Prerequisite:
Admission to the Nursing Program. Course rotation:
Fall.
2013 - Health Assessment - 3 credit hours
Prepares the student to conduct a comprehensive, holistic
assessment of individuals across the lifespan within a cultural
context. The communication process is underlined in the
course. Emphasis is on the collection processing and
interpretation of interview and physical examination data.
The nursing process as the organizing framework for nursing
practice and the role of the nurse as provider of care is explored,
with introduction to NANDA and Gordon's Functional Health
Patterns. Opportunities are provide to apply concepts and
skills with clients in the clinical laboratory.
Prerequisite: Admission to the Nursing
program. Course rotation: Fall.
2024 - Foundations of Professional Practice - 4 credit
hours
Builds upon concepts and skills presented in NSG 200 and
NSG 201. Introduces theoretical and research based concepts,
principles, and skills basic to beginning professional nurse
practice. Emphasis is upon the utilization of the nursing
process, critical thinking, and decision-making in the coordination
of care to achieve an optimum level of functioning for the
client. The student is introduced to psychomotor activities
for basic care of the simulated client in the laboratory.
Clinical experiences in community and long-term care settings
provide opportunities for application of theory to practice and
development of skill and proficiency with clinically stable clients
with minor health deviations.
Prerequisites: NURS 2002 and NURS
2013. Course rotation: Spring.
3013 - Pharmacology - 3 credit hours
Presentation of the principles of pharmacotherapeutics
applicable to professional nursing practice. Emphasis is upon
the nurse's collaborative role and responsibilities related to safe
medication administration utilizing the nursing process.
Focus is placed upon understanding the physiological actions of
drugs, expected client responses, most common and major adverse
effects, contraindications, and implications for nursing.
Drug dose computation is included in the course.
Prerequisites: Completion of 2000
level nursing courses. Co-requisite: NURS
3105, 3203.
3105 - Adult Health Nursing I - 5 credit
hours
Builds upon previous learning and provides students with
theory and research pertinent to adult health problems and their
collaborative management. Emphasis is upon the delivery of
client-centered, culturally-sensitive nursing care to adults with
acute and chronic alterations in health. Learning experiences
provide the opportunity for the student to continue to develop
proficiency in the six interrelated nursing roles of advocate,
clinician, collaborator/coordinator, educator, leader, and
researcher. Risk reduction, recover, and rehabilitation of
clients with selected disease processes are addressed with
application of concepts and skills using advanced technology in
clinical settings.
Prerequisites: Completion of 2000
level nursing courses. Co-requisites:
NURS 3013 and NURS 3203. Course rotation:
Fall
3203 - Pathophysiology - 3 credit hours
Facilitates the transfer of knowledge from the basic
sciences to diseases encountered in clinical practice. The
nursing process is utilized as the basis for examining clients with
alterations in physiological processes that disrupt or impair
health and the body's response to illness and disease.
Progressing from general concepts relevant to altered conditions,
the course examines disease processes encompassing all body
systems, with emphasis upon community encountered disease that have
high incidence of occurrence. Disease etiology,
incidence/prevalence, risk factors, clinical manifestations
including laboratory values and treatments are examined.
Prerequisite: Completion of 2000 level
nursing courses. Co-requisite: NURS 3013
and 3105. Course rotation: Fall.
3305 - Maternal/Newborn/Family Centered Nursing - 5
credit hours
Provides the student with nursing theory and
evidence-based practice principles needed to recognize and promote
health during pregnancy and childbirth. Focus is on pregnancy
and childbirth as natural processes, as well as identification and
care of high-risk recipients of nursing care. The nursing
process provides the direction to promote, maintain, and restore
health ford childbearing families within cultural context.
Clinical practice takes place in a variety of settings to allow for
learning experiences that will further expand competencies in the
six interrelated roles of professional nursing.
Prerequisites: NURS 3013, 3105, and
3203. Co-requisite: NURS 3355.
Course rotation: Spring.
3355- Pediatric/Family Centered Nursing - 5 credit
hours
Assists students in meeting the health care needs of
children and their families experiencing potential and actual
alterations in health. Course content includes care of the
child from infancy to adolescent years, with emphasis upon health
promotion, disease prevention, and illness management.
Learning experiences provide the opportunity for students to
develop proficiency in the six interrelated nursing roles while
caring for children in a variety of clinical settings.
Prerequisites: NURS 3013, 3105
and 3203.
Co-requisite: NURS 3305.
Course rotation: Spring.
4003 - Nursing Research - 3 credit hours
Assists the student in developing and strengthening
concepts of the professional nurse as a researcher and
evidence-based decision maker. Emphasis will be placed upon
the nurse as a consumer of research, with students critiquing the
research that contributes to the development of nursing theory and
improvement of practice. Includes all components of the
research process in the study of quantitative and qualitative
approaches. Prerequisites:
PSYC 1003 and all 3000 level nursing courses
or permission of faculty. Course
rotation: Fall.
4105 - Mental Health Nursing - 5 credit hours
Prepares the student to provide culturally competent
nursing care to individuals across the lifespan experiencing acute
and chronic mental/behavioral health problems. Students
examine theoretical and research findings as well as issues and
trends affecting the planning and delivery of nursing scare of
persons with common mental disorders or mental health needs.
Utilizing the nursing process as a framework for providing and
managing nursing care, the course emphasis is on the enhancement of
critical thinking, problem solving, effective communication, and
interpersonal skills in the coordination of care for the client
experiencing alterations in mental/behavioral functioning.
Learning experiences for this course are designed to further
enhance proficiency in the six nursing roles.
Prerequisites: All 3000 level
Nursing courses. Co-requisite: NURS 4155.
Course rotation: Fall.
4155 - Community Health Nursing - 5 credit hours
Assists students to synthesize data and apply knowledge
which focuses on modifying health-promoting behaviors from a
community and global perspective. Emphasis is upon
application of the six interrelated roles of the professional nurse
and to provide culturally sensitive care to promote and maintain
the health of individuals, families, and groups in community
settings. Demographic and epidemiologic data are explored to
identify populations at risk. Trends and issues in public
health including access to resources and delivery of care are
addressed. Students analyze political, economical, social, and
environmental factors that influence community and global
health. Clinical experiences are designed to allow students
to understand, modify, or enhance the factors impacting community
health and its delivery.
Prerequisites: All 3000 level
Nursing courses. Co-requisite: NURS 4105.
Course rotation: Fall.
4205 - Leadership in Nursing - 5 credit hours
The role of the professional nurse as a leader in the
profession and health care delivery is analyzed. Emphasis is
on professional role development as leader, for the common good, a
change agent, and a designer/manager of care. Healthcare and
nursing are viewed from the service and business context with
exploration of specific leadership initiatives. Contemporary
issues related to health care delivery are explored with an
examination of ethical, legal, and regulatory processes.
Knowledge and behaviors consistent with professional nursing
practice are stressed within a paradigm that views the nurse as a
leader and collaborator within the interdisciplinary team.
Prerequisite: NURS 4003. Co-requisites:
NURS 4307, 4402. Course rotation: Spring.
4307 - Adult Health Nursing II - 7 credit hours
Builds upon previous learning and provides adult health
problems and their collaborative management. Emphasis is on
delivery of culturally sensitive care to clients and their families
when health problems are more complex and outcomes less
predictable. Students continue to develop proficiency in the
six roles in the planning and delivery of care to clients
experiencing multisystem, life threatening health conditions in a
variety of clinical settings.
Prerequisites: NURS 3105.
Co-requisites: NURS 4205 and 4402.
Course rotation: Spring.
4402 - Capstone Practicum - 2 credit hours*
Provides a culminating experience in which the student
synthesizes nursing and general education knowledge to increase
their responsibility and accountability for providing quality
nursing care. With guidance from the faculty, the students select a
clinical agency for the practicum. Through a preceptorship
experience, the students will facilitate the transition from
student nurse to the role of the professional nurse. Students
will apply all nursing roles, (clinician, collaborator/coordinator,
advocate, educator, leader, and researcher) with emphasis on the
clinical and leader roles.
Prerequisite: This course is taken
in the final semester of the senior year. Course rotation:
Spring.
Note: *To meet the
Kentucky Board of Nursing requirements of 120 hours, this course
does not follow the traditional 1 semester hour for each 3 contact
hours for clinical experiences.