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www.insightintodiversity.com January/February 2016 $3.99 Nursing and Pharmacy How nursing and pharmacy schools are increasing access to education and improving healthcare ALSO IN THIS ISSUE: Spring Semester Career Guide What’s your story ? We want to know. Because at UVA School of Nursing, we know that nursing diversity goes far deeper We want to know. Because at UVA School of Nursing, we know that nursing far deeper than diversity numbers goes and categories. than numbers and categories. It’s why we’re actively shifting how and who we admit, looking at the whole student — taking into It’s why we’recultural activelyand shifting and who we lookingand at the whole student — takingmore into account socialhow backgrounds, lifeadmit, experiences exposures right alongside account cultural and social backgrounds, life experiences and exposures right alongside more traditional metrics like test scores, grades and extra-curriculars. traditional metrics like test scores, grades and extra-curriculars. It’s also why we’re redoubling efforts to attract, recruit and retain a diverse group of professors who It’s also why we’re redoublingbring efforts to attract, recruit and retain aand diverse group of who a rich variation of perspectives scholarship toprofessors the classroom. bring a rich variation of perspectives and scholarship to the classroom. Why? Why? Because interacting across difference within an inclusive and respectful community expands one’s Because interacting acrosstodifference within an inclusive and respectful community expands one’s world view, one’s ability understand, accept and empathize. Our brand of diversity isn’t about world view, one’s ability to understand, accept and empathize. Our brand of diversity isn’t about checking boxes or meeting quotas; it’s about nurturing sensitive, compassionate, culturally humble checking boxes or meeting quotas; it’s about nurturing sensitive, compassionate, culturally humble nurses. nurses. We’re cultivating the next generation of caregivers, nurse scientists, faculty and leaders ready for the We’re cultivatingopportunities the next generation caregivers, nurse and leaders ready for the of 21stof century care — on scientists, the unit, infaculty the community, and classroom. opportunities of 21st century care — on the unit, in the community, and classroom. Find out more: Find out more: nursing.virginia.edu/diversity nursing.virginia.edu/diversity | IN THIS ISSUE | January/February 2016 Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy 22 Nursing Professionals’ Roundtable 28 Studying Medicines Abroad Makes for Better Pharmacists at Home By Alexandra Vollman 40 Scholarship Program Shows Incremental Improvement in Representation of Men, Minorities in Nursing By Jamaal Abdul-Alim By Rebecca Prinster 44 First-Ever Alaska-Based PharmD Program Will Help Fill Critical Void By Jamaal Abdul-Alim 32 UM-Flint Eases Transition for Veterans from Military to Medical Service By Rebecca Prinster 34 Insight into Pharmacy Education with the AACP’s Jennifer L. Adams By Alexandra Vollman 38 47 Advancing Graduate Nursing Education Through Innovative Programs 50 On the Mend: Online Pharmacy Programs Bring Education, Practitioners to Rural America A National Imperative: Increasing the Number of Minority Pharmacists to Improve Patient Outcomes By Madeline Szrom By Lakesha Butler, PharmD Spring Semester Career Guide 54 How to Build a High-Performing, Diverse and Inclusive Super A-Team 60 By Joseph Santana 56 Dear Employer, Diversity Matters By Phyllis Finley The Nontraditional Workweek: Embracing Workplace Flexibility as a Business Imperative By Alexandra Vollman 64 Who Is an Online “Applicant”? By Jennifer Seda, JD ** Career opportunities can be found throughout the Spring Semester Career Guide ** EXTRA! 16 Why Diversity Matters: Fundraising By Alexandra Vollman 18 Coalition of Universities Rethinks How Students Apply to College By Rebecca Prinster insightintodiversity.com 3 UCF offers me a unique environment that joins researchers together. By creating collaboration in simulation, they’ve formed an invigorating environment where I am one of many developing techniques and researching simulation. — DESIREE DÍAZ The best new minds to PREPARE University of Central Florida Assistant Professor Desiree Díaz is creating best practices in nursing simulation. Previously at Johns Hopkins University and the University of Connecticut, Díaz develops safe environments where students and nursing professionals can gain practical experience before entering real-life situations. “My hope is to answer, ‘What is simulation best practice?’ and improve patient outcomes with my research.” UCF is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. We’re seeking 100 of the best new minds in research and teaching to foster diversity and innovation in our 13 colleges. Visit ucf.edu/faculty. | In Every Issue | Connecting Diverse Professionals To Diverse CareersTM January/February 2016 Volume 86 No. 4 & 5 In Brief 6 Diversity and Inclusion News Roundup 11132 South Towne Square, Suite 203 St. Louis, Missouri 63123 314.200.9955 • 800.537.0655 • 314.200.9956 FAX [email protected] [email protected] www.insightintodiversity.com Partner Profile ISSN: 2154-0349 © 2016 Potomac Publishing, Inc. 7 Catalyst Takes Research-Based Approach to Contacts: Lenore Pearlstein | Publisher Holly Mendelson | Publisher Alexandra Vollman | Editor Daniel Hecke | Art Director Rebecca Prinster | Senior Staff Writer Donald Washington | University Relations Developing Inclusive Workplaces By Alexandra Vollman New Directions 8 Diversity Leaders on the Move This Month’s Celebration 10 African American History Month HEED Award Spotlight 12 Cultural Transformation Drives Inclusive Excellence at UC College of Nursing By Rebecca Prinster 14 With a Constant Focus on Improvement, Florida State University Continues to Advance Inclusion By Madeline Szrom Careers 57 Job Opportunities Editorial Board: Pamela W. Arnold Vicky Ayers Brooke Barnett Kenneth J. Barrett Edna B. Chun, DM Deborah Dagit James A. Felton III Tia T. Gordon Jeffrey W. Larroca, JD William Lewis Sr., PhD Frank McCloskey Kevin McDonald, JD Julia Méndez Tanya M. Odom Joseph Santana Shirley J. Wilcher, JD, CAAP Anise D. Wiley-Little Damon A. Williams, PhD Shane L. Windmeyer Contributing Writers: Jamaal Abdul-Alim Lakesha Butler, PharmD Phyllis Finley Rebecca Prinster Joseph Santana Jennifer Seda, JD Madeline Szrom Alexandra Vollman The views expressed in the content of the articles and advertisements published in INSIGHT Into Diversity are those of the authors and are not to be considered the views expressed by Potomac Publishing, Inc. Closing INSIGHT 66 Nursing & Medicine Quotes Formerly the Affirmative Action Register On the Cover: The Consortium Library on the University of Alaska Anchorage campus insightintodiversity.com 5 [ In Brief ] American Indian Nurse Releases Textbook Focused on Native Health Issues Native Americans have the highest rates of diabetes, substance abuse, and teen suicide of any group in the U.S., yet there is a dearth of medical literature about how best to prevent and treat the underlying causes of these issues. That’s why Margaret Moss, assistant dean of diversity and inclusion for the University at Buffalo School of Nursing, and 12 other contributing writers — nine of whom are also American Indian nurses — published American Indian Health and Nursing. Released in December, it is the first textbook focused solely on providing care to this underserved population. “This book was written to answer the disturbing lack of information and understanding of the most underrepresented group in America — as patients, health professionals, and in academia,” Moss said in a statement. Currently, less than 1 percent of nurses are Native American. She writes in the textbook that disparities in healthcare policy and environmental, historical, and geographical factors have all contributed to Native Americans’ health inequality. For example, of the roughly 5 million American Indians in the U.S., 78 percent live off of reservations, and more than half of that population live in cities, where they are more likely to receive care from nonNative nurses, leading to an increased occurrence of discrimination in care. On the other hand, those who live on reservations have limited access to resources and healthcare due to geographical isolation, and the impact is tremendous; for example, the life expectancy for men on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota is less than 50 years. Moss says a distrust of government based on historical events, as well as low high school and college graduation rates among American Indians, further contribute to their poor health outcomes, especially when it comes to mental health issues. “Poverty, isolation, and overwhelming historical trauma all weigh on you and feed into how you react,” Moss says. “[In the book], we took a wider view of health to understand why this population has such poor health outcomes.” The textbook takes a holistic approach to Native American health by looking at the topic through spiritual, mental, physical, and emotional lenses to develop culturally sensitive nurses. Creating trust between patient and provider is also paramount to the textbook’s goals. — Rebecca Prinster A Year of Fostering Change A major theme on many college campuses this past year was the call for greater social justice, with many student activists demanding the renaming of university buildings and the removal of controversial objects from campuses. University of North Carolina Saunders Hall was renamed Carolina Hall in May, after months of protests and debate over the legacy of William Saunders, a purported Ku Klux Klan leader. Eastern Michigan University The school’s marching band dropped the image of a Huron tribesman from its uniforms at the beginning of the 6 January/February 2016 school year, following complaints from the Native American community. and Remembrance halls, respectively, following sit-ins by students. University of Texas at Austin In August, students successfully spurred the eventual relocation of a statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis from campus to a historical exhibit. East Carolina University and Duke University Both universities renamed dormitories previously named after former North Carolina governor and white supremacist Charles B. Aycock. University of Mississippi In October, students and faculty successfully petitioned to remove the Confederate flag from campus. Georgetown University In November, Mulledy and McSherry residential halls — named for former slaveholders.— were renamed Freedom University of Oregon In December, students in the Black Lives Matter movement demanded dropping the name of university founder Matthew Deady from buildings on campus, due to his advocacy for slavery. [ INSIGHT Partner Profile ] Catalyst Takes Research-Based Approach to Developing Inclusive Workplaces By Alexandra Vollman O riginally founded in 1992 is its Inclusive Leadership Learning with the goal of helping Experiences, a research-based women enter the workforce, curriculum aimed at developing Canadian-based nonprofit organization inclusive leaders at all levels of an Catalyst is now focused on the organization. The workplace itself. initiative has three key “We realized that it’s strange components: online to have women in the workforce learning experiences if the workplace is not ready in partnership with for them, and that caused us to edX, blended learning shift our focus from individual experiences, and women to organizations experiential learning themselves,” says Deepali for employee resource Bagati, executive director for group leaders. Catalyst’s U.S. region. Thus far, Catalyst Deepali Bagati “Our mission is around has launched two expanding opportunities for women online learning experiences focused on and businesses, and we’re very careful inclusive leadership training. The first about that ‘and’ because we believe.— one, “Becoming a Successful Leader,” and there’s research that supports reached more than 60,000 people in this.— that it’s not just about women,” 200 countries. she adds. “When you have an inclusive Although Catalyst has offices in a workplace where women and men have handful of countries, Bagati says the equal opportunity to succeed, advance, Internet allows for much farther reach. and lead, it has a ripple effect on the “Technology allows us to have a global economy and on the community.” presence,” she says. “It also allows us to In order to achieve its mission look at nuances in each culture.” of creating inclusive workplaces in The second component of these which diverse employees are able to learning experiences is a leadership thrive, Catalyst takes a research-based development suite called Leading approach. Much of this work has with Inclusion, a combination of focused on determining the barriers virtual and on-site education created women face and the cultural differences in partnership with global consulting that exist at companies around the firm BlessingWhite. A complementary world in order to develop best practices. service offered only to Catalyst member Through this research, Catalyst is organizations, this experience consists then able to provide its more than 800 of a series of six modules that explore members, the majority of which are strategies for developing leaders who global corporations and organizations, can effectively tap into the benefits of a with tools and services aimed at diverse workforce. creating awareness of diversity’s benefits In order to deeply engage with and driving organizational change. employees, Catalyst launched its One of Catalyst’s major initiatives Employee Resource Leadership Initiative (ERLI) — the third learning experience. It enables the organization to connect with employee resource group leaders across companies, industries, functions, and regions to share ideas and best practices on how to drive inclusion. Additional Catalyst research has examined the experiences of women of color in the workplace. The Women of Color Research Initiative seeks to discover not only the barriers these women face, but also what has worked for them in the past and where gaps still exist. With this information, Catalyst is able to offer its members solutions and strategies for improvement. “[Discovering] situations in which women of color actually feel included and are comfortable sharing their diverse ideas … is so important nowadays,” says Bagati. “Women of color are increasing in numbers and increasingly getting professional degrees, and that’s a big talent pool; that’s an opportunity.” Bagati says that Catalyst’s emphasis on research helps lend the organization credibility, but more important, it provides legitimate, fact-based methods for creating inclusive environments. “At the end of the day, we want inclusive workplaces,” she says. “There are diverse groups of people in the workplace, but unless you have an environment where you can leverage that diversity, [it] doesn’t work very well.”● Alexandra Vollman is the editor of INSIGHT Into Diversity. For more information on Catalyst, visit catalyst.org. insightintodiversity.com 7 [ New Directions ] ALABAMA Carla Jackson Bell, PhD, has been appointed dean of the Robert R. Taylor School of Architecture and Construction Science at Tuskegee University. She had been professor and director of multicultural affairs in the College of Architecture, Design, and Construction at Auburn University in Alabama. Kemba Chambers, PhD, has been named acting president of Drake State Community and Technical College in Huntsville. She had been dean of mathematics, natural sciences, and pre-engineering at Calhoun Community College in Tanner, Ala. Adam A. Smith has been appointed director of undergraduate academic advising and student success in the Office for Academic Affairs at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. He had been assistant vice president for student success at the University of Akron in Ohio. ARKANSAS LaTonda Davis-Williams has been promoted to employee relations manager and Title IX coordinator at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. She had been serving as employee relations manager on an interim basis. Angela Williams, EdD, has been named assistant vice provost for student affairs and executive director of the Career Development Center at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. She had been director of the center. 8 January/February 2016 CALIFORNIA Julianna Barnes, PhD, has been appointed president of Cuyamaca College in El Cajon. She was most recently vice president of student services at San Diego Mesa College. Tomas Gomez-Arias, PhD, has been named the first chief diversity officer at Saint Mary’s College of California in Moraga. He had been serving as chair of the marketing department and professor of marketing and global business at the college. Jefferson Huang, PhD, has been appointed acting dean of Claremont McKenna College in Claremont. He retains his position as vice president for student affairs at the college. FLORIDA Angela Felecia Epps, JD, has been named dean of Florida A&M University College of Law in Orlando. She was most recently professor of law at the William H. Bowen School of Law at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Traki Taylor, PhD, has been appointed dean of Florida A&M University College of Education in Tallahassee. She was most recently a professor and dean of the College of Education at Bowie State University in Maryland. GEORGIA Arthur Dunning, PhD, has been named president of Albany State University. He had been serving in the position on an interim basis. Ivan Harrell II, PhD, has been appointed executive vice president for academic and student affairs at Georgia Piedmont Technical College in Clarkston. He was most recently vice president of student success at Lone Star College-CyFair in Cypress, Texas. Paul Jones, PhD, has been named president of Fort Valley State University. He had been serving as interim president of Darton State University in Albany. HAWAII Doris Ching, EdD, has been appointed interim chancellor at the University of Hawai’i-West O’ahu. She is emeritus vice president for student affairs for the University of Hawai’i system. ILLINOIS Curtis Sartor, PhD, has been named assistant to the president for diversity and spiritual development at Judson University in Elgin. He retains his role as professor of architecture in the university’s School of Art, Design, and Architecture. KANSAS DeAngela BurnsWallace, EdD, has been named vice provost for undergraduate studies at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. She had been assistant vice provost for undergraduate studies at the University of Missouri in Columbia. Marché FlemingRandle, PhD, has been appointed assistant to the president for diversity at Wichita State University. She retains her position as assistant dean of the university’s Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. MASSACHUSETTS Joan Vitello, PhD, RN, has been named dean of the Graduate School of Nursing at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worchester. She was most recently associate chief nurse for cardiovascular, thoracic, and surgical acute and critical care nursing at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. MISSOURI Chuck Henson, JD, has been appointed interim vice chancellor for inclusion, diversity, and equity at the University of Missouri in Columbia. He had been associate dean for academic affairs and trial practice in the School of Law at the university. Michael Middleton, JD, has been named interim president of the University of Missouri system. He is deputy chancellor emeritus at the University of Missouri in Columbia. NEW JERSEY Raul Sanchez, JD, has been appointed equal employment opportunity/affirmative action officer at Union County College. He was most recently senior director for Title IX and risk management at Stony Brook University in New York. NEW YORK Cynthia Bowman has been named chief diversity and inclusion officer with Bank of America. She had been learning and leadership development and diversity and inclusion executive for Bank of America’s Global Wealth and Investment Management organization. Danielle LaraqueArena, MD, has been appointed president of the SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse; she is the first woman to serve in that position. She was chair of the department of pediatrics at Maimonides Medical Center and vice president of Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital, both in Brooklyn, N.Y., and professor of pediatrics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University in New York, N.Y. Allen Nelson Lewis Jr., PhD, has been named dean of the College of Health Related Professions at SUNY Downstate Medical Center. He was most recently department head in the Department of Health Sciences at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va. NORTH CAROLINA G. Rumay Alexander, EdD, RN, has been appointed special assistant to the chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She retains her position as professor and director of multicultural affairs in the School of Nursing at the university. PENNSYLVANIA Nolan Atkinson Jr., JD, has been named chief diversity and inclusion officer for the city of Philadelphia. He is a member of and chief diversity and inclusion officer in the Duane Morris LLP law firm in Philadelphia. TENNESSEE George Hill, PhD, has been appointed the first chief diversity officer and vice chancellor for equity, diversity, and inclusion at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. He is a Levi Watkins Jr., MD Professor Emeritus in Medical Education and the former associate dean for diversity in medical education in the university’s School of Medicine. TEXAS Pamela Anthony, PhD, has been named vice president for student affairs at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. She had been serving as dean of students at Iowa State University in Ames. VIRGINIA Deborah Noble-Triplett, PhD, has been appointed senior vice provost for academic affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. She was most recently assistant vice president in the offices of academic affairs and human resources for the University of Missouri system. Menah Pratt-Clarke, PhD, JD, has been named the first vice provost for inclusion and diversity and vice president for strategic affairs at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. She was most recently associate chancellor for strategic affairs and associate provost for diversity at the University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign. Has your campus recently hired a new diversity administrator? INSIGHT Into Diversity would like to publish your news. Please email: [email protected]. insightintodiversity.com 9 Ruby Bridges On November 14, 1960, Ruby Bridges became one of the first African American students to attend class at one of two allwhite elementary schools in New Orleans, following the courtordered integration of the city’s public schools. The 6-year-old and her family faced harassment and discrimination in response. In 2001, Bridges was awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal. She is now chair of the Ruby Bridges Foundation. First president of the American Medical Association: Lonnie Bristow (1995) FIRST! The first HBCU owned and operated by African Americans was Wilberforce University in Ohio, named for abolitionist William Wilberforce in 1856. Dr. Levi Watkins Jr. performed the first implantation of an automatic defibrillator into a human heart, in 1980. FIRST! Otis Boykin invented electronic control devices for guided missiles, IBM computers, and the pacemaker. First president of the American Bar Association: Dennis Archer (2002) Marie M. Daly In 1947, Marie M. Daly earned a PhD from Columbia University, thus becoming the first African American woman to receive a PhD in chemistry. Her research related to how chemicals in the body digest food, and with Quentin B. Deming, she discovered the relationship between high cholesterol and clogged arteries. Celebrating African American History Month This February, for African American History Month, we highlight some of the accomplishments and firsts of African American educators, inventors, and civil rights activists. FIRST! The African Free School in New York City was the first school for African Americans First Pulitzer Prize winner: Gwendolyn Brooks (1950) and was founded in 1787 by the abolitionist group the New York Manumission Society. Charles H. Houston Charles H. Houston was a renowned attorney for the NAACP who served as the first African American editor of the Harvard Law Review and vice dean of Howard University’s law school. He was instrumental in laying the groundwork for what became Brown v. Board of Education, which ruled that school segregation was unconstitutional. 10 January/February 2016 Ralph J. Bunche was the first African American to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in mediating the Arab-Israeli truce in 1950. In 2011, 1.6 million African Americans earned advanced degrees. That same year, there were 3.9 million African American college students. FIRST! First Ivy League university president: Ruth Simmons (2001) Mary Jane Patterson As of 2005, there were 2.4 million African American military veterans in the U.S. Mary Jane Patterson was born the daughter of fugitive slaves in Raleigh, N.C., in 1840. When she graduated from Oberlin College in 1862, she became the first African American woman in the U.S. to earn a bachelor’s degree. She went on to teach in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., and became the first African American principal of the Preparatory High School for Negroes, in 1871. the highest of any minority group according to the American Community Survey. Degrees Earned by African Americans: Associate Bachelor’s Master’s Doctoral 1999-2000 60,221 108,013 36,595 7,080 FIRST! 2009-2010 113,905 164,844 76,458 10,417 Alain LeRoy Locke % Increase 89% 53% 109% 47% Charles R. Drew established the first blood bank in 1938. First U.S. Supreme Court justice: Thurgood Marshall (1967) Mary McLeod Bethune Born to former slaves, Mary McLeod Bethune was an educator and civil rights leader best known for establishing a private school for African American girls, which later became Bethune-Cookman University. She also advised President Franklin D. Roosevelt on African American concerns and shared his New Deal message with African American voters who had historically voted Republican. Alain LeRoy Locke — nicknamed the “Father of the Harlem Renaissance” for his active support of the artistic movement.— was a scholar and chaired the Howard University Department of Philosophy until his retirement in 1953. In 1907, as a recent Harvard graduate, Locke became the first African American selected as a Rhodes Scholar but was denied entrance to several colleges in Oxford because of his race. In 1968, San Francisco State University became the first four-year college to establish a black studies program, under Nathan Hare. The program became the Black Studies Department a year later. Between 1969 and 1973, roughly 600 similar programs and departments were created at U.S. colleges and universities. More than half of all African American public school teachers and 70 percent of FIRST! black dentists and physicians graduated from an HBCU. There are Rod Paige 107 HBCUs in the U.S., From 2001 to 2005, Rod Paige served as the first African American U.S. secretary of education. In the 1980s, Paige taught at Texas Southern University, where he was also dean of the College of Education for 10 years and established the university’s Center for Excellence in Urban Education. including public and private institutions, community colleges, and professional schools. In 1872, Elijah McCoy invented an automatic lubricator for oiling steam engines. “The real McCoy” is a reference to his invention. First Congressional Medal of Honor: Sgt. William H. Carney (1900) George Washington Carver and Percy Julian were the first two African Americans admitted to the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1990 — Carver for agricultural advances and Julian for drugs to combat glaucoma. Sources: biography.com; U.S. Census Bureau, 2011; National Center for Education Statistics, 2013; images via Wikipedia [ HEED Award Spotlight ] Cultural Transformation Drives Inclusive Excellence at UC College of Nursing By Rebecca Prinster R ecognizing that lasting change can come only from the concerted efforts of a group of people, the University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Nursing, led by Dean Greer Glazer, has taken deliberate steps to create an inclusive culture and address differences head on, rather than shy away from them. In July, for example, when a UC police officer was involved in a fatal shooting just off campus and the story was established in 2013 as part of the college’s strategic plan, which Karen Bankston — associate dean for clinical practice, partnership, and community engagement in the College of Nursing.— says is an intentional linkage with the wider UC campus’s strategic vision to create a more diverse campus community. The council’s mission is “to be a change catalyst for a culture of inclusive excellence,” with a vision “to inspire, influence, recommend, UC Medical Center nurse Terri Tripp (L) mentors UC College of Nursing student Christine Chege. made national headlines, the College of Nursing came together to talk about racial inequality in the community. “Rather than ignore the shooting, we embraced it as a problem that affects our college too,” says Gordon Gillespie, assistant professor and co-chair of the college’s Diversity Advisory Council. “We held a discussion with the parameters that everyone is allowed to have a bias and a point of view, and we talked about what that means, without holding grudges. It was important to have a safe space for discussion.” The Diversity Advisory Council 12 January/February 2016 This year, the college is reading Wes Moore’s The Other Wes Moore, the true-life account of two young African American men of the same name whose lives followed different paths. “What’s notable is that we [have] used leaders and experts from different departments outside the College of Nursing [in the discussion sessions],” says Glazer. “It has definitely led to better conversations by having these different, outside perspectives.” Dean Greer Glazer (far left) and Karen Bankston (second from left) with students at the college’s Summer Bridge Program graduation and challenge” the College of Nursing and the UC community to embrace and reflect the diversity of Cincinnati. But Gillespie says there are a number of other activities that the council organizes to encourage examinations of difference, such as movie nights and book clubs that involve all faculty, staff, and students in the College of Nursing. These culminate in group discussions. Films screened have included Dallas Buyers Club and A Place at the Table, and readings have included The Help by Kathryn Stockett and Rolling Back: Through a Life Disabled by Mike Shirk. “I’ve seen more and more engagement,” she adds. “At first, the people who were attending these movies and book clubs were members of the council, but more and more, there is wider engagement and different people are showing up.” This increased participation is evidence of the college’s progress in bringing about a cultural shift among its faculty, staff, and students. Glazer says this is the first, and most crucial, step to implementing successful diversity strategies. “It starts with the cultural transformation,” she says. “You can’t make all the other stuff work if the campus culture doesn’t celebrate diverse perspectives.” One hallmark of the College of Nursing’s diversity initiatives is its Leadership 2.0 pipeline program, which works with first-generation, low-income, and underrepresented high school students — mainly from urban settings. Beginning in the 11th grade, students in each cohort receive precollege advising and academic support and take part in weekend academies. Then they participate in a summer bridge program, and when they arrive on campus in the fall, they continue to receive intensive advising and support, both social and academic. Bankston says students who have participated in Leadership 2.0 have higher GPAs than other underrepresented nursing students, and some have higher GPAs than the general nursing student population. Because of its success, the college received a $2.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Minority Health this year. This money will be used to expand the program to ninth graders at one of the six area high schools the college partners with in an effort to diversify the healthcare workforce and reduce health disparities. “We found out it’s not good enough to focus on incoming students, but that we had to work on filling the pipeline earlier. … Students in ninth grade need exposure to health careers and math and science support in high school,” Glazer says. The college has been able to assess its progress through what Glazer calls a “laser focus on metrics” and by garnering feedback from student, faculty, and staff surveys. For example, to address concerns that some were leaving the UC College of Nursing because of discrimination, they conducted interviews with 60 faculty members and students in the college to learn how microaggressions were affecting their daily experiences. “One international student said her work group isolated her because they assumed she couldn’t do the work as well,” Gillespie says. “The faculty member told the student to join the group, but that faculty member didn’t understand the situation. So we made a purposeful effort to meet with the faculty and explain how to deal with that.” Gillespie says these interviews have allowed the college to create a model for inclusive policies — one that is built on openness and teamwork.● Rebecca Prinster is a senior staff writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. The University of Cincinnati College of Nursing is a 2015 INSIGHT Into Diversity HEED Award recipient. insightintodiversity.com 13 [ HEED Award Spotlight ] Florida State University’s campus in Tallahassee Students at Florida State University With a Constant Focus on Improvement, Florida State University Continues to Advance Inclusion By Madeline Szrom F lorida State University (FSU), with its more than 40,000 students, has built a reputation on never settling. Although the school has been recognized by the Institute for Higher Education Policy (IHEP) for its inclusion initiatives, university leaders never see their job as complete. Their goal is to continuously improve the state of diversity on campus, ensuring that current and future students have a positive college experience that empowers them into the future. “A key component is ensuring that FSU provides an environment that is welcoming and inclusive and celebrates diversity in a manner that faculty, staff, and students know that FSU is the place for them,” says Renisha Gibbs, finance and administration chief of staff and assistant vice president for human resources. With this focus on creating a safe and welcoming space for all, FSU boasts a diverse campus community. “Our student body represents every 14 January/February 2016 county in Florida, all 50 states, and over 128 countries,” says Miguel Hernandez, associate director of the Center for Leadership and Social Change at FSU. “Minorities represent 30 percent and women represent 57 percent [of the student body].” In addition to having a diverse student population, the university helps ensure the success of underrepresented students. Currently, FSU’s graduation rate for African American students is 69 percent — which, according to the U.S. Department of Education, is 24 percent higher than the national average. To cater to its large and diverse student body, FSU has created a variety of programs to increase the knowledge and understanding of people from all backgrounds. One example of this is general cultural competency trainings, which give students the opportunity to delve into the histories and cultures of different groups, with a focus on selfidentity and cultural respect. The university’s Social Justice Ally Training is another offering that focuses on educating the campus community around issues of identity, gender, religion, and race. These twoday workshops aim to help students build an understanding of individuality, as well as increase their respect for people who are different from them. The goal of the training is to “develop allies who will promote an equitable and inclusive environment and serve as social change agents in a diverse and global society,” says Michelle Douglas, director of organizational development and equal opportunity and compliance. Through learning about oneself and others, Douglas says participants are better prepared for life after college. For Hernandez, workplace preparedness is a major reason behind FSU’s offering these programs. “In the context of the workplace, valuing diversity means creating a workplace that respects and includes differences, recognizes the unique contributions the individuals with many types of differences can make, and creates a work environment that maximizes the potential of all employees,” he says. While FSU’s diversity efforts emphasize training, they also deliver support and guidance to specific underrepresented groups. The university’s Black Male Initiative (BMI), for instance, helps guide young African American men as they transition from high school into college. Overall, the initiative’s mission is to instill in these young men values and positive practices that will help them succeed in college, as well as aid them as they move into meaningful careers or continue their education. On a national level, only 33.1 percent of African American men graduate from college, compared with 54.5 percent of white men and 44.8 percent of African American women. Through mentoring, academic counseling, leadership and service, and attendance at social functions, BMI fosters connections for African American men, helping them build a professional network via campus and community involvement. Veterans are also well supported at the university. In an attempt to be the “most veteran-friendly and empowering university in the nation,” FSU’s Student Veteran Center helps ease veterans’ transition from military service to campus life by providing them the support and resources they need to be successful. FSU is also known for its support of first-generation and disadvantaged students. In 2012, FSU created the Center for Academic Retention and Enhancement (CARE) — a version of which was initially launched in 1968 as Horizons Unlimited — by merging Horizons with Multicultural Student Support Services, Minority Academic Programs, and the university’s Summer Enrichment Program. CARE provides support for first-generation, socioeconomically disadvantaged students and also helps them with their transition into college. Students selected for CARE receive automatic admissions to FSU, participate in a Summer Bridge Program, and are connected to a variety of academic and engagement programming for the duration of their time at the university. Services to these students include tutoring, academic advising, life coaching, financial aid assistance, and financial literacy education, among others. In addition, faculty and staff help students stay engaged on campus through workshops and various activities. “CARE operates to provide equity and access to students disadvantaged by world image and, in others, is very monolithic,” Douglas says. “We have to ask ourselves the question that even though we may appear diverse, are we truly inclusive?” While she believes that FSU is inclusive, she also says that it’s important for the university to remain innovative and informed, which it does, in part, through its Diversity and Inclusion Council. The council.— composed of faculty, staff, students, and community members, as well as the president and members of the president’s cabinet — is in charge of Student veterans at FSU virtue of educational and socioeconomic reasons,” says Douglas. Due to the work being done by CARE, FSU was recognized by IHEP in November 2015 as one of the nation’s top 10 “Access Improvers” for having made impressive efforts to provide support and educational opportunities for traditionally underrepresented students. Although FSU continues to work toward increasing its already high standards of diversity and inclusion, Douglas says that determining where the school excels and where improvements can be made is often difficult. “We are a very large institution that recruits its student body and much of its workforce from within a state that in some areas presents a truly global implementing and executing policies and practices; these have included a climate analysis, data reviews, programming, and public relations, as well as efforts to diversify faculty and staff. These efforts ensure FSU maintains its diversity while continuing to improve upon inclusion. “We have to continue to listen to our campus community, move forward with the efforts that we are currently working on, and develop new ideas and methodologies to address the needs of our diverse community,” Gibbs says. Madeline Szrom is a contributing writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. Florida State University is a 2014 and 2015 INSIGHT Into Diversity HEED Award recipient. insightintodiversity.com 15 Why Diversity Matters: Fundraising By Alexandra Vollman A t a time when funding for who is also chair of the Association higher education in most of Fundraising Professional’s (AFP) states remains at preDiversity and Inclusion Committee recession levels, colleges are enhancing and serves on the board of directors for fundraising efforts in order to elicit AFP International. “I think focusing on larger gifts from more donors. [those] and being mindful of the ways According to the Center on Budget that you’re communicating with every and Policy Priorities, the average state single person you reach out to is only currently spends 20 percent less per going to help.” student than it did before the 2007The caveat, she says, is that schools 2008 academic year. At the same time, need to be doing good work in the areas charitable donations to colleges and of diversity and inclusion. Colleges and universities reached an all-time high universities that do well supporting, in 2014, with nearly $38 billion gifted, including, and ensuring a positive based on the annual survey by the college experience for all students, Council for Aid to Education (CAE). including underrepresented students, While the nation’s private Ivy elite may have better luck when asking tend to amass the majority of alumni for donations this wealth — 28.6 percent down the road, says Una of the total amount donated Osili, director of research in 2014 went to fewer than 2 for the Lilly Family percent of the roughly 1,000 School of Philanthropy at schools that participated Indiana University-Purdue in CAE’s survey — public University Indianapolis. institutions are beginning to “The bottom line, and see the value in expanding I think the big takeaway, their own fundraising efforts. is that a lot of the work Jaye Lopez Van Soest Jaye Lopez Van Soest, around building and development director cultivating donors has at Public Justice and to start with individuals former director of development for on campus,” she says. “And building the University of the District of that relationship with the university is Columbia David A. Clarke School of something that should be done while Law, a historically black law school they are students.” in D.C., says that one way schools When communicating with can enhance their fundraising, and university faculty and staff in her set themselves apart, is by leveraging previous position at Clarke School diversity and inclusion. of Law, Lopez Van Soest says she “You have a situation where schools emphasized that every interaction absolutely have to raise additional students have affects the school’s funds, private support funds, and I ability “to secure their support when think that diversity and inclusion can they are alums,” which is why she play a role,” says Lopez Van Soest, believes focusing on the student 16 January/February 2016 experience is so critical. “The better supported, particularly minority, students are from the second they get here — even before they get here, the second they are recruited, the second they even contemplate coming to the school — every interaction and how they’re supported … is absolutely going to impact whether or not they give to you 10 years down the road, or however many years,” she says. As the nation’s demographics continue to shift toward a new minority-majority, colleges and universities are also experiencing a transformation, with larger numbers of minorities enrolling and graduating. Specifically, between 1984 and 2009, the Latino student population increased by 546 percent, the African American student population by 240 percent, the Asian American and Pacific Islander student population by 314 percent, and the Native American student population by 219 percent. “… For most colleges and universities, their alumni in the past were predominantly white,” Osili says. “I think the challenge for many [of these institutions] is how to reach alumni of these diverse backgrounds.” At Clarke School of Law, Lopez Van Soest was in charge of raising money from alumni, who she says are mainly African American and Jewish. This, she says, like any alumni fundraising, requires knowledge and understanding. “Those are not [populations] that I am a part of, so it was a function of me learning as much as I could about the cultures and being extraordinarily respectful and mindful of the cultural nuances involved with fundraising SU_DNA_InsightDiv_Ad_NOV_15_Layout 1 11/6/15 3:02 PM Page 1 Take the First Step ... Explore Your Options! within those [populations],” she says. According to Osili, a more culturally sensitive approach to communicating and engaging with diverse alumni is becoming the norm. “In the past, the standard approach was maybe a tailgate party for alumni at football games, but now what [schools] are trying to do is build engagement of opportunities that are perhaps more specific,” she says, “because let’s say a group, for religious reasons, doesn’t drink; then a tailgate party wouldn’t be appropriate.” Instead, she recommends engaging alumni by determining their background and interests and aligning communications with those. “So if somebody was a science and engineering major, inviting them back to attend a lecture on campus, or if they were involved with classical music while they were an undergraduate [student], maybe inviting them to a big concert,” says Osili. “It’s about tailoring those messages so that folks are going to be most responsive,” adds Lopez Van Soest, who emphasizes the need for schools to engage with alumni on a regular basis. She believes keeping alumni up to date on diversity and inclusion efforts — as well as other positive work being done across campus — and informing them of the role they will play in the institution’s success as donors can affect whether and how much they donate. Specifically, marketing diversity and inclusion initiatives in fundraising materials may also help colleges and universities reach new audiences, says Lopez Van Soest. “When you highlight your diversity and inclusion programs, or your focus is on bringing as many people to the table as possible, you may have people [reaching out] to you who may not have talked to you before, and that’s always a good thing,” she says. Further influencing a school’s ability to fundraise is the makeup of its advancement team. Lopez Van Soest says that having a diverse mix of professionals on a fundraising team will help schools better connect with their diverse alumni. While touting diversity and inclusion efforts in fundraising materials may resonate with some potential donors, it may not have the same effect on others. However, as the diversity of the nation, as well as the student population, continues to increase, so will the need for colleges and universities to support and connect with individuals — both as students and alumni — in ways that lead to future support for their institutions. “I certainly think that in today’s world it is very important to demonstrate best practices around diversity and inclusivity for the general donor population,” Osili says. “Organizations that are not serving students well are going to have a hard time telling their story to potential donors and funders.”● DOCTOR of NURSING PRACTICE Salisbury University New Tracks: n n n Post-Bachelor’s to D.N.P. – 80 credits for doctorate and eligibility for Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) certification Post-Master’s to D.N.P. – 68 credits for doctorate and FNP eligibility Post-Master’s to D.N.P. – 38 credits for doctorate with leadership focus PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS n Full-time study for quick career advancement n Distance-accessible n One-on-one course format faculty interactions; small cohort n Competitively priced tuition and fees; scholarships available Apply by May 1 for Fall 2016 start! 410-543-6420 or [email protected] www.salisbury.edu/nursing Alexandra Vollman is the editor of INSIGHT Into Diversity. insightintodiversity.com 17 Coalition of Universities Rethinks How Students Apply to College By Rebecca Prinster N ext year’s college applicants are on the cusp of generations Y and Z; born in the mid to late 1990s, this intermediary group is the most diverse and most technologically savvy demographic yet. Colleges and universities are beginning to realize that identifying the most outstanding students from such a group requires a unique and multifaceted approach. Some admissions officials say the current Common Application process, which is used by more than 600 U.S. schools, does not accurately communicate an applicant’s strengths and accomplishments, in part because the student must scramble to compile application materials over a compressed period of time. Further, in 2013, the Common Application suffered major glitches in its updated version. Students and admissions offices alike experienced setbacks, and many schools delayed their early-decision deadlines. The Coalition for Access, Affordability, and Success developed out of the frustration caused by those glitches. Its goal is to improve the application process for students and colleges by offering an alternative to — but not necessarily a replacement for.— the Common App. The coalition.— which consists of more than 80 U.S. institutions of higher education that have proven excellence in affordability and graduation rates — has pledged to offer an application format that strives to be advantageous for low-income and first-generation students. 18 January/February 2016 Member schools graduate at least 70 percent of their student body in six years and are able to provide adequate needbased financial aid for in-state students (at public institutions) and domestic students with significant needs (at private colleges and universities). Schools meeting these benchmarks were invited to join the coalition, but it expects to expand in the future. The new application, which is tentatively set to launch in April 2016, will include a collaboration platform to facilitate communication between students and prospective schools. ninth grade, in fact. Critics say this puts additional stress on students, but some, like Rick Clark at coalition memberschool Georgia Institute of Technology, say this is actually beneficial for students, especially those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds or who are the first in their family to go to college. “I make the parallel that the application process is like shooting off a starter gun, when the application becomes available in August,” says Clark, who is director of undergraduate admissions at Georgia Tech. “Students whose parents have gone to college and In addition to its goal of establishing a better application process, the coalition is committed to encouraging students to start thinking about their college applications earlier. Students can also fill a private, virtual “locker” with photos, videos, essays, and other materials on which counselors, teachers, and mentors can provide feedback. When students apply to a college, they can add components saved in their locker to the application. This new application will be compatible with mobile devices, laptops, and tablets for access on the go and will allow students to apply to any school within the coalition. In addition to its goal of establishing a better application process, the coalition is committed to encouraging students to start thinking about their college applications earlier — as early as come from a ‘college-going’ culture.— for them the race is on in August, with deadlines coming up in October and November for early action. These students know what the racecourse looks like ahead of the game. “But we know that there are many highly capable students, who aren’t from college-going backgrounds, who don’t hear the gun and aren’t even in the starting block. Some of these students are testing for the first time in the fall of their senior year.” Clark says that by elongating the timeline for applying to college, the new application process will allow students to compile information as it is happening and will put them in the college-going mindset earlier. He gives as an example a student requesting a letter of recommendation from a teacher in ninth or 10th grade and saving that to his or her virtual locker. If that teacher retires or moves by the time the student is applying to college, a letter of recommendation is already secured. Research has also shown that students who start thinking about college earlier are more likely to apply, an essential factor in bringing more first-generation students into higher education. As with the Common App, coalition colleges and universities become part of a database of searchable member schools. According to Clark, this was one of the reasons Georgia Tech decided to join. “We draw students from all over, but we don’t have a sizeable marketing budget or a robust recruiting staff,” he says. “This is a way for us to be in front of students [so] they see our name when they’re scrolling through the list of schools.” Similarly, Clark hopes being a coalition member will help Georgia Tech enlarge its pool of applicants and lead to an increase in women and underrepresented minorities at the college. Illinois State University (ISU) has similar hopes for the new application. Troy Johnson, associate vice president for enrollment management at the university, says it will allow for a more holistic depiction of prospective students. “The new application gives students the chance to shine and show their ambitions and specialized qualities, like civic engagement and volunteer work,” he says. “More and more, we’re seeing the application process look at the different attributes students bring with them.” Johnson doesn’t see the new application as a disadvantage for students who choose not to use it but as a unique option for those who do. Ultimately, he sees the new process as a way to change the perception of college for firstgeneration and low-income students. “I’m hoping that this new application spurs a nationwide conversation about thinking and planning for college earlier so [that] students and families who otherwise may wait to apply or may not get in on time — that these conversations with students and families across the U.S. and in Illinois will start earlier and the college-going rate will continue to grow.” ISU plans to use its current application process, along with the new multimedia coalition application. However, other member schools, such as the University of Washington (UW ), plan to use the new application exclusively. Paul Seegert, director of admissions at UW, says the school can’t support IT resources for two different applications, but he’s confident that CollegeNET, the vendor in charge of developing the new application platform, will be able to deliver the resources students need to apply. Like Clark and Johnson, he is optimistic that the new application will attract a more expansive pool of prospective students. “We hope that we receive more and better applications from students who are less likely to apply because of their socioeconomic background,” he says. “And we hope it’s easier for out-of-state students to apply because they’ll be applying to other coalition schools at the same time.” For now, ahead of the official launch of the new application platform, it is hard to predict what the results will be and whether thinking about college earlier will alleviate or exacerbate students’ stress. The coalition does not pretend to have all the answers when it comes to college application accessibility, but it says it will continue to improve its platform based on feedback from students, parents, and admissions counselors.● Rebecca Prinster is a senior staff writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. For more information about the coalition and the new application format, visit coalitionforcollegeaccess.org. Not your ordinary study abroad More than $1 million in scholarships and grants awarded each year Scholarships include: · HBCU scholarship · HACU scholarship SIT offers more than 70 programs worldwide, including 13 focused on global health studyabroad.sit.edu insightintodiversity.com 19 Looking for a faculty position in higher education? Looking for qualified and diverse candidates for open faculty positions? Learn more at WWW . THEREGISTRY . TTU . EDU 20 January/February 2016 Nursing Pharmacy fast facts In 2013, there were 287,420 pharmacists and 362,690 pharmacy technicians in the United States. 55% of registered nurses (RNs) hold a bachelor’s degree or higher. Nursing employment — including RNs and advanced practice nurses — is projected to increase 20.2% between 2012 and 2022. Pharmacy employment is projected to increase 14% between 2012 and 2022. income The median annual salary for an RN was $65,470 in 2014. The median annual salary for a pharmacist was $119,280 in 2013. The highest-paid 10% of RNs earn more than $96,320 per year, while the bottom 10% earn less than $45,630. The highest-paid pharmacists in 2014 earned approximately $150,000 that year, while the lowest-paid pharmacists earned $89,000. $ diversity Nearly 30% of nursing students at all levels represent minority populations. In 2013-2014, 13,838 professional degrees in pharmacy were awarded; 60.4% went to women and 39.6% went to men. Only 10% of the 2 million RNs nationwide are men. Of the total number of students enrolled in professional degree pharmacy programs for fall 2014, 61.4% were women and 12.4% were underrepresented minority students. Demographics of RNs: White: 80.4% African American: 8.8% Hispanic or Latino: 3.3% Asian: 5.7% American Indian or Alaska Native: 0.4% Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.1% Two or more races: 1.3% In 2014, a total of 293,000 people were employed as pharmacists in the U.S. Of these, 56.3% were women, 18.9% were Asian, 8.1% were African American, and 5.6% were Hispanic or Latino. Sources: Health Resources and Services Administration, The U.S. Nursing Workforce: Trends in Supply and Education; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2014-2015 Occupational Outlook Handbook; American Association of Colleges of Nursing, The Changing Landscape: Nursing Student Diversity on the Rise, 2014; U.S. Census Bureau; Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics; American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] Nursing Professionals’ Roundtable By Alexandra Vollman Cherie Rebar PhD, RN Peter McMenamin PhD David Vlahov PhD, RN 22 January/February 2016 INSIGHT Into Diversity recently spoke with three nursing professionals about various issues within nursing education and practice. They offered insight into the increased demand for diversifying the profession, the call for more highly educated nurses, and more. Cherie Rebar, PhD, RN, is a professor in the Division of Nursing at Kettering College in Ohio, as well as an adjunct professor of nursing at Indiana Wesleyan University. She is also co-founder and co-president of RN2ED, an organization dedicated to bridging the gap between clinical nursing practice and education. She has written and edited many nursing textbooks and other resources. Peter McMenamin, PhD, is senior policy adviser for the American Nurses Association (ANA), where he serves as the organization’s health economist with expertise on the economic value of nurses and nursing services. He previously served as director of healthcare financing policy for the American Medical Association and has worked in or with a number of government civilian health agencies. David Vlahov, PhD, RN, is a professor and dean of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) School of Nursing. He previously served as a professor at Johns Hopkins University and Columbia University, as adjunct professor at several prestigious nursing and medical schools, and as co-director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Health and Society Scholars program. The nursing profession has seen an increase in the number of non-white nurses in the last decade, with minorities now making up 25 percent, according to a 2013 report from the Health Resources and Services Administration. What obstacles does the profession face on the path toward recruiting more minority nurses, and what strategies do you recommend? Rebar: I think marketing methods and outreach campaigns are important — and strategic planning. Because these are not things that we can grow overnight, there has to be a strategic plan in place over a period of time to meet the challenge. For example, the University of Maryland School of Nursing applied for and received a $1.2 million contribution of cash services and grants to develop a marketing campaign to have a more ethnically diverse mix of men and women in its nursing program. [The university saw] a 37 percent increase in applications from last fall, which shows that when you plan for something, you can produce. Another thing that is so important is that we appeal to prospective students at a middle school level whenever possible; we are seeing that we need to be speaking to students much earlier. … Middle school is an ideal time to start painting a picture of what nursing looks like. Internships are also important. That is just recruitment. [Once they’re in college], these students need support. They need to be plugged in to mentors — and this is true for all nursing students; this is not just for men or minorities. … Many times students have families, they have relationships, they have jobs; sometimes they are older, sometimes they are the first generation in their family to go to college. That is why I think it is so important that we partner with them on their avenue to success. McMenamin: If you look at nurses age 60 and older — both men and women — 81 percent are white, and for those under age 40, 72 percent are white, [according to data from 2006 through 2010]. If you look at the overall employed population in the U.S., it is 68 percent white. So over the course of 30 years, the distribution of nurses in the U.S. had been moving in the direction of where the employee population is. The youngest group is much closer to the nation’s overall demographics, so diversity is increasing. Vlahov: One of the things that I looked at was American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) data to see what has happened to enrollment in colleges of nursing and insightintodiversity.com 23 Embracing diversity in pharmacy education. Duquesne University’s six-year Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) program blends classroom and laboratory training with opportunities for real-world experience to prepare students for rewarding careers and help them to reach their goals. what has been the trend. In the U.S. population overall, about 36 percent of people are categorized as minority, and if we look at AACN data for 2014.— for bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) students.— 29 percent were minorities. For the master of science degree, it was 30 percent, and for the PhD degree, about 30 percent. So I think the increases that we are seeing are the results of efforts by schools to do outreach and have Another example is the University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center at Houston. It was looking specifically at [increasing the number of ] men, so it convened a forum of male nurses to ask them what would have attracted them even more to the profession and what [they thought] would attract more men to the profession. One of the things these men said they wanted to see was more males within different settings in nursing, such as emergency “I think the American Association of Men in Nursing (AAMN) … has done quite a bit to develop recruitment materials and [increase] communications ... about nursing — how great it is for men and what a rewarding career it can be.” David Vlahov duq.edu/pharmacy sensitivity training on how to address microaggressions and deal with unconscious bias, as well as really work toward creating an environment for people from diverse backgrounds to come and get the most out of their education. According to U.S. Census Bureau data from 2013, only 9.6 percent of registered nurses (RNs) are men. What is being done to increase the percentage of male nurses, and why is their representation crucial to the practice? Rebar: Strategic marketing is the most important thing to reflect on. … There have been many institutions, especially of higher learning, that have taken on strategic marketing to attract men specifically into the practice of nursing, as well as minorities. One is Johnson & Johnson. It has what it calls a “Campaign for Nurses,” and it airs strategic television [commercials] that portray nurses from many different backgrounds, of both genders, caring for people from diverse populations. I think this is a wonderful thing, because people can see that and build an interest. 24 January/February 2016 and trauma. So UT started advertising its nursing program on the sports page of the newspaper. I think that is a wonderful thing to show a balance, rather than only using what they call the “flowery, feminine language” of nursing. Interestingly enough, UT’s nursing school population jumped 29 percent after this campaign. Vlahov: I think the American Association of Men in Nursing (AAMN) … has done quite a bit to develop recruitment materials and [increase] communications that go out to high school students and undergraduates to talk about nursing.— how great it is for men and what a rewarding career it can be. A lot of the people whom I meet that apply or consider applying to the UCSF nursing school came to nursing either because their own relatives said it is a great idea, or they met [other] male nurses; [they] also talked about the communications they had received from the AAMN. So I think that strategy has been helpful, but I also think it can become more extensive. While women make up the majority of the RN workforce, they earned an average yearly salary that was $9,600 less than that of male RNs, according to 2011 Census Bureau data. What do you believe are the reasons for the gender pay gap, and how do you propose this inequity be addressed? Rebar: The study that I am most familiar with, which was conducted recently, looked at 88,000 RNs from the National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses — who practiced from 1988 to 2008 — and 205,825 RNs from the 2001 through 2003 American Community Surveys; this study represented males and females. It found an overall adjusted earnings difference of approximately $5,148 across the board. Of course, this is different in different demographics, and it is different for different specialties. There are also some limitations to this study because there are specialties that were not included. A study conducted by nurse researchers and published in the Journal of the American Medical Association ( JAMA) showed there had been no narrowing of that pay gap across settings, specialties, and job titles over a quarter of a century. I think [fixing] this comes down to very grassroots efforts by institutions or locations of practice. The only way that is going to change is by institutions being mindful of the skills, qualities, and abilities that nurses — not male nurses or female nurses — but nurses, bring to the forefront. McMenamin: Nobody believes that there is explicit gender discrimination, but there is inadvertent gender discrimination. … I think the challenge is basically twofold, and it involves childrearing and family responsibilities. Labor economists have also found that workers of both genders who take time off from their career for whatever reason, when they come back, they don’t come back to where they would have been if they had stayed — in terms of their salary; they come back to where they were. They fall behind and never quite catch up. This is true for both genders. The other thing is culture and family responsibilities. For whatever reason, in this country and many others, women take over family responsibilities. That means that they are less available for working overtime or doing extra shifts. The Census Bureau does have information that suggests that male nurses are more likely to be moonlighting — have two or more jobs as opposed to just one. Men do take off a little time for paternity leave but typically only for a couple days or weeks as opposed to women, who often take off weeks, months, or even years. Vlahov: Men tend to go toward the higher-paying specialties, so that could be part of it. [They] also tend to move toward higher levels of education. When I was going into nursing, I knew that I was going to go through and get a PhD. I had that ambition right from the beginning; I wanted to fast-track to leadership. So I think some of that is selection. One of the things that we do at UCSF periodically is look at equity salary surveys and [determine whether] there has been an unconscious bias in any possible way and how we correct that. I think that is a practice that we’re going to see more widespread in different employment scenarios. In order to respond to the “demands of an evolving healthcare system and meet the changing needs of patients,” the Institute of Medicine recommended in 2010 that 80 percent of RNs obtain a bachelor of science degree in nursing by 2020 and that the number of nurses with doctorates double in that time. Why do you believe it is important that RNs hold a higher degree? What should nursing schools be doing to increase the number of RNs with a baccalaureate or advanced degree? Rebar: I believe it is important for RNs to hold a higher degree because research and literature show that there are better outcomes for patients when they are cared for by nurses who hold [an advanced] degree. “The only way [the pay gap] is going to change is by institutions being mindful of the skills, qualities, and abilities that nurses.— not male nurses or female nurses — but nurses, bring to the forefront.” Cherie Rebar One thing that I think is so important is being prepared to educate more nursing faculty. We are seeing a decrease in the available number of nursing faculty as [their] average age increases. And there are applicants for programs who often go unaccepted, not because they are not qualified, but because there are not enough seats or enough clinical sites; that often comes down to not enough faculty to accommodate the interest that exists. It would also be wonderful if educational institutions were able to partner with employers needing nurses with baccalaureate or advanced degrees to offer tuition incentives or partnerships for nurses to [easily] go back to school to pursue a higher degree while still [practicing] nursing. McMenamin: Contemporary data increasingly demonstrate the growing depth and breadth of value of a BSN-grounded education. If you are going to be a responsible nurse, you ought to be constantly asking yourself, “How can I improve? How can I better my skills? What can I do to make my contribution to patient care more than it is today?” It should be part of the ethics of any profession to continue to improve, [but] it probably doesn’t make sense insightintodiversity.com 25 for the oldest of associate degree nurses to be going back to school — simply because the cost of getting the additional education will not be repaid if they are only going to be in practice for five to 10 more years. Those nurses will retire, and when they do, the BSN needle is going to move a lot “If you are going to be a responsible nurse, you ought to be constantly asking yourself, ‘How can I improve? How can I better my skills? What can I do to make my contribution to patient care more than it is today?’” Pharmacy: An Essential Healthcare Profession Peter McMenamin 26 January/February 2016 faster; the opportunities are going to be there to move into those jobs. But I worry about those nurses because I think there is a tradeoff between the BSN background and the experience, and I worry that hospitals that are going in that direction are being shortsighted. I think what hospitals should be doing is taking their most senior nurses, the ones who are going to retire soon, and offering them the opportunity to extend their careers.— maybe with less direct patient care and more time spent being mentors to new graduates. And if hospitals hired a few more new grads and used the senior nurses to mentor them, they could build their own experienced workforce. Pharmacists are the medication experts on the healthcare team. Together with other health professions, they help people live healthier, better lives. Learn more about AACP: www.aacp.org Vlahov: How do we value education? It is not technical training; that you can get on the job. I look at higher education as teaching the philosophy of the work, and that is providing framework that can organize people’s thinking, and then providing life-long skills, in terms of developing critical thinking. Higher education’s purpose is really to prepare people for critical thinking, for thinking regarding how does all of this fit into a larger framework — whether it is in the workplace or through education. I think advanced education really creates a much more thoughtful, powerful, and effective workforce. There is a movement now toward making education more widely available and accessible through online programs, and there are [online] RN-to-BSN programs. I think these are all good ideas in terms of increasing access, but we have to be very thoughtful about the quality of the programs and [their] content, as well as what the strategies are in terms of instructional design and the most effective use of educational technology. … It’s not just online education for its own sake. Some studies have been done that show that online [education], if done well, can be very effective and maybe as effective for getting across the didactic information. So there is a place for it.● Alexandra Vollman is the editor of INSIGHT Into Diversity. 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At Purdue, everyone benefits from the life experiences of students, faculty, and staff of all races, ethnicities, gender identities, sexual orientation or physical abilities. We invite you to join the Boilermaker nation. Making Lives Better College of Pharmacy www.pharmacy.purdue.edu School of Nursing www.purdue.edu/hhs/nur Allen College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, marital status, sex, age, national origin, disability, sexual orientation or gender identity. insightintodiversity.com 27 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] Georgia State University graduate Gloria Rinomhota dressed as the emperor’s wife at the Summer Palace in Beijing, China University of Connecticut students attend The Legend of Kung Fu play at Beijing’s Red Theatre. Studying Medicines Abroad Makes for Better Pharmacists at Home By Rebecca Prinster T his year, Chinese pharmacologist Tu Youyou was awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine for her work in developing a drug to treat malaria. The artemisininbased treatment that she helped produce is based on ancient Chinese remedies dating back 1,600 years and has been administered to more than 1 billion patients since 2000, according to the World Health Organization. Artemisinin compounds used in the drug are derived from sweet wormwood, a plant native to Asia that is commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). This ancient tradition is generally considered an alternative practice in the U.S., but as Tu’s accomplishment illustrates, TCM can have far-reaching, positive effects. However, pharmacy curricula often lack information about alternative pharmaceutical methods. “Patients are looking for nondrug solutions, but herbs are actually 28 January/February 2016 where drugs started,” says Lauren Schlesselman, associate clinical professor and associate dean for academic affairs at the University of Connecticut (UConn) School of Pharmacy. “In pharmacy, herbs make up a much smaller part [of the curriculum]; we teach much more about over-the-counter and prescription drugs than herbals. TCM is something that patients are really interested in and knowledgeable about, but faculty are not.” Typically, easily avoidable drug interactions can occur when pharmacists are unaware of herbal medicines that patients are taking. That is why, with the increasing popularity of TCM, some pharmacy schools are recognizing the importance of teaching students about alternative medicines by taking them to the source — China. Currently, only three universities offer such excursions: UConn, Purdue University, and Georgia State University (GSU). This summer, Schlesselman says 20 UConn pharmacy students traveled to Beijing, China, for five weeks of study focused on herbal medicine, acupuncture, and Mandarin Chinese. Only one or two students went on the first trip in 2008. In addition to knowing how western drugs can interact with herbal medicines, Schlesselman says pharmacists need to be knowledgeable about cultural differences to understand how best to treat all patients. “When you know the cultural aspects of your patients and have a cultural understanding of alternative, traditional medicine, you as a pharmacist are better able to serve that patient population,” she says. “Being aware of what different cultures do and take to treat themselves will make you more aware of how drugs may interact.” As with anything, there is a learning curve to becoming knowledgeable about a different culture, but for UConn student Connor Walker — a doctor of pharmacy candidate who went on this year’s Beijing trip — that was part of the appeal. “Eastern culture was something that I had not known too much about before I went on this trip, and it was a wonderful experience to be able to be a part of a different culture,” he said in an email. “I absolutely love the concept of [leaving] the safety of your comfort zone and just completely immersing yourself in an entirely different culture,” he added. “There is nothing better for making you grow as a person.” Tonglei Li — associate dean of graduate programs, professor, and Allen Chao Chair in the Department of Industrial and Physical Pharmacy at Purdue University — also makes the case for the cultural knowledge and increased sensitivity pharmacy students can gain from studying abroad. Li says that TCM has endured for thousands of years because a lot of its methods work, but it looks different from western pharmaceuticals in the Top: UConn students take classes on TCM at the School of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the Peking University Health Science Center; Left: Inside Chinese pharmaceutical company Tongrentang in Beijing, which was founded in 1669 and is the largest producer of traditional Chinese medicine; Right: A display at the Beijing University of Chinese Medicine Exhibition Hall of Chinese Materia Medica way it is practiced. Exposing students to these different approaches was a driving factor behind Purdue’s College of Pharmacy offering study abroad opportunities to its students. “Pharmacy students do not have many opportunities to study abroad,” Li says. “Exposing students to different perspectives makes them more appreciative of history and how other people handle healthcare issues.” Unlike western medicine, which often treats a broad range of symptoms with a single pill, TCM examines how five different elements.— fire, earth, water, wood, and metal — manifest in an individual. When a patient has an imbalance of elements, a unique combination of herbs is developed to treat that patient’s particular range of symptoms. TCM remains a very popular mode of healthcare in China, and Li says it makes up about 40 percent of the healthcare market share, compared with western medicine at 60 percent. This coming spring, Li will lead about a dozen pharmacy and prepharmacy students on a trip to Shanghai, China, where they will visit hospitals, pharmacies, and medical gardens. He says they will also have time to mingle with local residents. “Culturally, I think it’s a very good opportunity to get exposure — and to get a different perspective — about medicine, health, and about life,” he says. At GSU, interest from chemistry and biology students was the impetus for developing a study abroad program in pharmaceuticals. Since 2012, the university has been offering a two-week program in Beijing. Bin Xu, professor of chemistry and study abroad program director at GSU, says the average group consists of eight or nine students. “We wanted to give them the opportunity to experience a different way of life and culture and also focus insightintodiversity.com 29 Bin Xu (left) and Gloria Rinomhota of GSU on traditional and modern Chinese medicine,” Xu says. “China has a rapidly growing economy that cannot be overlooked.” Prior to departure, students take noncredit courses in Mandarin, as well as Chinese culture and history. While in Beijing, they visit research labs, where they observe clinical trials. Xu says many pharmaceutical companies outsource this kind of research to countries with emerging economies because it is more cost effective. “Students learn something that they can’t learn from lectures,” she says. “They learn the possible challenges that can occur during clinical testing, and when they are looking for a job, they will have already had some of these experiences.” Gloria Rinomhota is one such student; she traveled to Beijing as an undergraduate chemistry major while at GSU and says the experience prepared her for success at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy in Baltimore, where she is a doctor of pharmacy candidate. She says she saw firsthand how language and cultural differences can be barriers between patients and pharmacists. “It’s helpful to see from the other side,” Rinomhota says. “If you can’t understand the community and appreciate different people and cultures, you won’t end up asking the right questions or making sure you both understand each other.” While Xu and Schlesselman say they doubt the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will ever approve TCM formulas for use — because their makeup is so complex — they believe these international experiences still serve a valid purpose. As globalization continues, the need for pharmacists with an understanding of alternative medicines and the patients who use them will continue to grow.● Rebecca Prinster is a senior staff writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. Ranked #6 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report EXPLORE. EXPAND. EXCEL. Living our core values – DIVERSITY The University of Maryland, Baltimore is committed to a culture that is enriched by diversity and inclusion, in the broadest sense, in its thoughts, actions, and leadership. nursing.umaryland.edu/academics 30 January/February 2016 Are you an RN who wants to earn a degree, or are you just beginning your nursing education? EXPLORE our options: • Bachelor of Science in Nursing • RN-to-BSN • RN-to-MS • MS Clinical Nurse Leader (ranked #1 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report) Want to earn an advanced degree? EXPAND your nursing education with our graduate programs: • Master of Science (2 specialties ranked in top 10 by U.S. News & World Report) • Doctor of Nursing Practice (5 specialties ranked in top 10 by U.S. News & World Report) • Doctor of Philosophy Want be the best nurse you can be? EXCEL with a degree from the University of Maryland School of Nursing. No matter where you are on your nursing education path, we have a program that fits your needs. Come explore our educational programs, expand your knowledge, and excel as a nurse leader. We are not your typical pharmacy school. Why? Find out today at www.marshall.edu/pharmacy/insight insightintodiversity.com 31 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] Dr. Beverly Jones with current University of Michigan-Flint VBSN students at the university’s Veterans Day Remembrance Celebration UM-Flint Eases Transition for Veterans from Military to Medical Service By Rebecca Prinster A lthough rates of homelessness and unemployment among U.S. military veterans have declined significantly in the past decade, in 2014, nearly 50,000 veterans were still without homes and 573,000 were unemployed, according to data from the National Alliance to End Homelessness and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Also, military veterans have a higher risk of mental health disorders and substance abuse, stemming from trauma incurred during combat service.— common factors among people who are homeless. It was because of these figures that faculty members in the University of Michigan (UM)-Flint Department of Nursing decided that more needed to be done to improve outcomes for returning military service members. The school’s recently launched accelerated veterans’ bachelor of science in nursing (VBSN) program is designed to ease 32 January/February 2016 the transition from military service to employment for veterans and remove barriers they face in accessing education. Thanks to a three-year, $1 million grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, UM-Flint is able to offer specialized support for veterans, as well as streamline the transfer of their military medical training credits toward their bachelor’s degree. Additionally, because the program is accelerated, veterans can earn their degree in 16 months, rather than three years. Beverly Jones, VBSN project director and assistant professor of nursing in UM-Flint’s Department of Nursing, wrote the grant proposal that secured the HRSA funding. As a veteran herself, she says her experiences in the Army Nurse Corps were a motivating factor in establishing the VBSN program. “Military experiences stimulated my awareness of the connectedness of all peoples to each other and our environments,” Jones said in an email. “Army nurse experiences … deepened my understanding of the impact and importance of active participation on whatever team I’ve been assigned or have personally selected, and I saw firsthand the sense of loyalty, goaloriented motivation, and the expanding skills and abilities that military experiences developed and nurtured in both civilians and military personnel.” John Collins, VBSN program manager, says Jones’ presence on the faculty has had a positive impact on how the department serves its student veterans. “Her being here creates a special identification with other veterans; not only is she a veteran, but she’s also part of the nursing faculty,” he says. “For student veterans to see her in that position gives them a sense of being part of something larger.” Jones says the VBSN serves to challenge the myths some non- Veterans attend UM-Flint’s Veterans Day Remembrance Celebration. veterans have about returning military service members. “The program offers the structure for veterans to provide strong support to other students through mentoring and purposeful role modeling,” she says. “Simultaneously it is fulfilling nursing workforce needs and providing a cadre of recruits who will further the diversity goals of the nursing profession.” Education Attainment and Innovation, whether to accept certain military credits is ultimately the decision of individual colleges and universities. “ACE ensures the integrity and quality of education,” Spires says. “But each institution establishes its own protocols to align with its own mission and vision. There is no one set of protocols [for deciding how military “Military experiences stimulated my awareness of the connectedness of all peoples to each other and our environments.” Beverly Jones, VBSN project director The VBSN allows veterans to build on their previous military medical training, but transferring credits for that training into a traditional nursing degree program is a complex process. Collins says it requires considerable man-hours to evaluate a student veteran’s Joint Services Transcript ( JST) and assess his or her readiness for the nursing program. Veterans’ prior medical education can be evaluated with help from recommendations made by the American Council on Education (ACE). According to Michele Spires, director of Military Programs at ACE’s Center for credits should transfer].” Because military healthcare training is very specialized, she says there can be “mini gaps” in returning service members’ knowledge; for example, a Navy hospital corpsman may have extensive preparation for dealing with bullet wounds but less for handling civilian injuries. At UM-Flint, incoming student veterans must demonstrate competency in certain academic and clinical areas as a means of evaluating where those gaps may exist before credits can be transferred. The VBSN program is not separate from UM-Flint’s accelerated BSN track, and returning service members take classes with non-veteran students. Currently, there is not a set number of seats allotted for veterans in the program, but Collins says that is something faculty will be voting on. The first cohort of student veterans in the VBSN program began classes this past fall, and the five students — all male — should complete their degrees by December 2017. Students in the program receive extra support through the Student Veterans Resource Center on campus; UM-Flint serves around 200 student veterans and has been nationally recognized for its student veteran services. In addition to tutoring and help with writing assignments, veterans can access assistance with navigating their VA benefits, housing allowances, and tuition reimbursement. Collins says faculty and staff in the department are also dedicated to helping student veterans find a nursing job in their area of expertise once they graduate. In addition, the school is developing local partnerships to ensure this happens. “The transition between nursing school and the nursing profession is usually smooth, but sometimes it can be rocky,” he says. “We are developing relationships with communitybased health facilities, hospitals, and emergency rooms to ensure a seamless transition for veterans from school, to the licensing exam — the NCLEX.— to the profession. And we’ll be following up with students and keeping in contact [with them] for six months after they graduate.” Jones echoes this idea by saying the supportive environment of the VBSN program is intended to ensure veterans’ success through retirement. “In a nutshell,” she says, “the program is designed to put students who are veterans ahead of the curve upon their return to civilian life and college.”● Rebecca Prinster is a senior staff writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. insightintodiversity.com 33 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] Insight into Pharmacy Education with the AACP’s Jennifer L. Adams How the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy promotes diversity and inclusion in pharmacy education By Alexandra Vollman F ounded in 1900, the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) represents the interests of accredited schools and colleges of pharmacy nationwide, which includes more than 6,400 faculty members, 62,500 professional students, and 5,100 graduate students. As the leading organization for pharmacy education in the U.S., the AACP aims to lead, as well as partner with, member schools to advance pharmacy education, research, scholarship, practice, and service to improve societal health. Senior Student Affairs Adviser for the AACP Jennifer L. Adams, PharmD, EdD, recently spoke with INSIGHT Into Diversity about the 34 January/February 2016 organization’s efforts to increase diversity and improve cultural competency in the pharmacy profession, as well as some of the ways the AACP is working to influence pharmacy education nationwide. Q: According to 2014 data, 14.9 percent of pharmacists are minorities, while 12.4 percent of pharmacy students enrolled in first professional degree programs in fall 2014 were from minority groups. With this in mind, what is the AACP doing to improve opportunities for and increase minority representation in pharmacy schools and in the profession at large? A: The topics of diversity, inclusion, cultural competency, and health equity have been interwoven into the activities of our organization for many years and will continue to be interwoven into the activities moving forward, until it’s something that’s no longer talked about or no longer an issue — which, who knows if that will ever happen. But it’s definitely something that our organization is committed to helping our members with. [We have] done some good things, but we have a long way to go as well. Our organization is made up of members who are faculty and deans at schools and colleges of pharmacy, as well as students who are interested in Above: Jennifer L. Adams, senior student affairs adviser for the AACP academic careers, and we have what are called “standing committees” that are charged each year by our president. In 2014, the president of our organization charged the [AACP’s] Argus Commission with looking into diversity and inclusion and where we are as an organization and as a profession. That group published a report, and one of its recommendations was for the association to develop a task force on diversity. Our current president this year actually charged a task force on that topic, but with a different spin. The task force is called Diversifying Our Investment in Human Capital. … Obviously it’s important from a health equity perspective to have the right human capital in place, but it’s really more of a focus on the actual people … who make up our schools and colleges of pharmacy — whether [that’s] students or having the right faculty in place. That committee was charged with [determining] what the barriers are to diversifying our investments that we make in human capital and what some of the game-changing activities are that are currently happening at some of our schools, and then working to propose some short- and long-term strategies for our schools and colleges of pharmacy — and for the profession.— to be able to diversify the people who are part of the healthcare team serving the role as medication experts. That committee met for the first time in November, and it will be working over the course of the next two years. Q. Why does the AACP believe it is important for people of all races, ethnicities, and backgrounds to be represented in the profession? A: When we think about diversity in pharmacy, it’s not just diversity for diversity’s sake. [We] know that if we have a diverse workforce, then we can better combat the issues that come with healthcare disparities. … To really truly have health equity, we need to have practitioners who are trained in an educational environment where diversity is evident and where they are trained and prepared to be able to work with diverse populations — and not just diversity based on race and ethnicity, but looking at patients with disabilities … or sexual orientation, the LGBTQ population. We want to be educating our students in environments where everyone feels included, where everyone feels like it’s a safe place to learn and to be able to qualify as a good pharmacist, and that comes with the culture and the climate of the school or the college. So, this is really the backbone of the [Diversifying Our Investment in Human Capital] committee that I mentioned. To really provide health equity, it has to start with the way we educate our students. Q: As the national organization representing pharmacy education in the U.S., does the AACP educate its member schools on and emphasize the importance of diversity, inclusion, and cultural competency to pharmacy education and practice? A: We help to influence accreditation standards. We are not the accrediting body — that’s the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education — but we work with them. They provide a minimum standard, and what we want is to provide what our schools should be aiming for that’s well above the minimum; those are called the CAPE outcomes, and CAPE is the Center for the Advancement of Pharmacy Education. Our organization runs that center and provides the outcomes that guide what our schools and colleges do. Diversity, inclusion, and cultural competency are a huge part of that. We’ve also offered what we call institutes. These are different training conferences for teams of faculty and administrators, [where they] come to learn about different topics. We’ve had institutes in the past on cultural competency. Q: Knowing that different populations face varying health risks, what is the AACP doing to improve insightintodiversity.com 35 knowledge and understanding of these to help current and future pharmacists better address health disparities, as well as treat and be sensitive to the needs of diverse groups? A: In terms of the training and other things that we do, we can impact the schools and the faculty, and then they can take what they’ve learned from us and implement that in the classroom with students. So, it’s not anything that we are necessarily providing, but we’re helping our schools improve their students’ knowledge and understanding. We’ve talked a little about some of the ways that we do that, but one of the other ways is that we have a couple of special interest groups, [such as one] for minority faculty and [another one] on cultural competence and health disparities. We provide those venues for our members to be able to collaborate on research and on teaching best practices in those areas, and for people with similar interests to engage. Our cultural competence and health equity special interest group, in particular, is very active and engaged; they host webinars for their membership on a regular basis. Q: With the ongoing debate over religious freedom in the U.S., is the AACP doing anything to address the issue of conscientious objection and to educate schools and students both on pharmacists’ obligations and rights, as well as the rights of patients? A: This is not necessarily something that we have a policy within our organization about, but the American Pharmacists Association (APhA) does have policies related to conscientious objection. It’s not something that I can fully speak to on behalf of the AACP, but I can speak to it on behalf of the fact that I am a pharmacist. The policy they have at APhA … says that pharmacists should be able to step out of the way of caring for a patient [if ] they have a conscientious objection, but they can’t step in the way of a patient receiving the appropriate care. That’s a challenge for an organization like ours because we have schools and colleges of pharmacy that are at faith-based institutions, where the faith of that institution definitely guides the way it provides education and teaches students. We have to be able to support those schools but also support large public institutions. It’s one of those topics that we hope our faculty handle in a sensitive way, because for people who do have a conscientious objection, we don’t want them to have to engage in anything Excellence that knows no boundaries At The University of Texas at Austin College of Pharmacy, we value diversity of people, ideas and perspectives that furthers a culture of excellence from Pharm.D. to Ph.D. and beyond. College Cultural Day 2015 Texas Pharmacy WhaT sTarTs here changes The World Learn how we can help you realize your full potential. www.utexas.edu/pharmacy 36 January/February 2016 related to healthcare that they are opposed to, but we also don’t want them stepping in the way of patients [receiving care]. I can give you an example. I worked part time as a community pharmacist for a number of years, and I worked with a pharmacist who had a conscientious objection to dispensing birth control. If you were a patient who visited that pharmacy, you would never have an issue being able to get birth control, but that particular pharmacist was not the person who was going to dispense it. … And I can almost guarantee that there was not a single patient at that pharmacy who was on birth control who ever had an issue being able to access the care they needed. It’s not necessarily something that our association has tackled from a policy perspective, … but it is something that’s addressed in our member schools and colleges of pharmacy. Generally, most of the education that we provide is based on an expressed need from our schools and colleges; this isn’t something that has bubbled up in terms of being a big priority, and I think the reason for that is that they are already incorporating it into the way they’re educating their students. The laws on conscientious objection vary by state. … Regardless of what state [a student is educated in], they may do residencies someplace else; they may move to another state and practice. So when we educate, we try to educate as broadly as we can, but when you learn law, you’re learning it for the state that you’re in. However, to be a practicing pharmacist, [all states require] that you take a law exam to be licensed in that particular state.● Alexandra Vollman is the editor of INSIGHT Into Diversity. For more information on the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, visit aacp.org. The 2015-2016 HEED Award Benchmarking Report The 2015-2016 INSIGHT Into Diversity Higher Education Excellence in Diversity (HEED) Award Benchmarking Report is now available. Order your electronic copy today to share with your entire campus. Discover how you can expand and improve upon your campus’s diversity and inclusion efforts in this groundbreaking report! This is the only national report on leadership capacity and performance focused on the goal of having a truly diverse and inclusive learning environment. This is a must-read for every high-level administrator in higher education. Get your copy of the report that will change the way colleges and universities think about diversity on their campuses. Learn about many of the successful strategies used by 2015 HEED Award recipients to create a truly diverse and inclusive campus climate. Authored by Dr. Damon A. Williams, PhD Available now for $495! To order, contact Lenore Pearlstein at 301-219-6464 or [email protected]. insightintodiversity.com 37 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] A National Imperative: Increasing the Number of Minority Pharmacists to Improve Patient Outcomes By Lakesha Butler, PharmD A ccording to Forbes’ list of the best jobs in healthcare for 2015, pharmacists are No. 1. Pharmacists are highly respected, they are well paid, and their role continues to evolve, as evidenced by their current prescriptive authority in some states and a soon-to-come insurance provider recognition. In addition, more and more students are considering careers in pharmacy. To meet the demands of the aging population, and the nation’s overall population increase, the number of pharmacy schools has greatly increased over the last five years to produce more pharmacists. As of July 2015, there were 135 schools and colleges of pharmacy in the U.S. — an increase from 72 in 1987.— and collectively they graduated more than 10,000 students per year. The increase in pharmacy schools and the subsequent increase in pharmacy students across the U.S. is encouraging. The gender shift — nearly 50 percent of pharmacy students are now female — is also noteworthy 38 January/February 2016 considering that pharmacy has historically been a male-dominated healthcare field. However, the racial and ethnic makeup of pharmacy students and graduates has not changed much. The low representation of minority students in schools and colleges of pressing topic due to the changing demographics of the country and the impact more minority pharmacists can have on the health status of Americans. It is projected that by the year 2050, minorities will comprise 50 percent of the U.S. population. Yet, according Research shows that minority healthcare professionals are more likely to practice in medically underserved areas where many minority patients reside, which results in improved access to healthcare for these populations. pharmacy has been a consistent reality for years despite the topic being a focus of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) for more than 15 years. During that time, the percentage of minorities enrolled in pharmacy school has increased only slightly. The concern over inadequate minority student enrollment in pharmacy schools has become a to 2014 AACP student data, only 12.4 percent of pharmacy students across the U.S. are underrepresented minorities; specifically, 7.3 percent are African American, and 4.5 percent are Hispanic or Latino. Furthermore, research shows that minority healthcare professionals are more likely to practice in medically underserved areas where many minority patients reside, which results in improved access to healthcare for these populations. Additionally, minority patient ratings are higher when they are served by providers who are racially and ethnically similar to them. Therefore, the lack of current and future minority pharmacists needed to serve the growing minority population is and will continue to have a profound impact on the health and well-being of our nation. Diversifying students enrolled in pharmacy schools has to be a priority that is carried out at each school and college of pharmacy. So why is the number of underrepresented minorities so low in pharmacy schools? Are minority students aware of the benefits of a career in pharmacy? Are schools of pharmacy intentional about recruiting more diverse students? Is diversification of students a priority of U.S. schools and colleges of pharmacy? At Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) School of Pharmacy, faculty, staff, and administrators have been working to address the issue. Located in the Midwest, SIUE’s minority student enrollment has been lagging; in 2013, minority students represented approximately 6 percent of the total pharmacy student population. This figure has been low since the school opened its doors in 2005. Some may think that this is to be expected in the Midwest. However, Illinois has a large minority population — 15.1 percent African American and 12.3 percent Hispanic — and most of the school’s students come from Illinois. Also, the SIUE campus is approximately 20 miles from the city of St. Louis, Mo., whose population is almost 50 percent African American. There is no lack of minority students in the surrounding area. Recognizing the value in increasing the diversity of the pharmacy school student body, and considering the low number of minority students who are academically prepared for and apply to the PharmD program, SIUE developed the Healthcare Diversity Summer Camp. The summer camp is a one-week, residential experience that exposes underrepresented minority high school students to college life and SIUE’s schools of pharmacy, nursing, and dental medicine. Students stay in campus housing for the week and are mentored by current minority pharmacy, nursing, and dental school students. The students spend the first day touring the campus, learning about student resources available at the university. Then they are exposed to hands-on activities and provided admission information and tips for each of the healthcare programs at SIUE. On the final day of camp, students participate in an ACT preparatory course and a closing ceremony. The goal of the camp is to inspire these students and expose them to healthcare fields while equipping them with the knowledge and confidence needed to pursue a professional education and a healthcare career. As a result of the camp, approximately half of the participants have enrolled in a pre-pharmacy, pre-medicine, or nursing program, and one-third of the participants have enrolled in pre-pharmacy or are current pharmacy students at SIUE. Since the Healthcare Diversity Summer Camp launched in 2011, the School of Pharmacy has seen a 2 percent increase in the number of underrepresented minority students enrolled. Programs like this provide an example of how schools and colleges of pharmacy can address low minority representation in their student body and in the profession at large.● Lakesha Butler, PharmD, BCPS, is a clinical associate professor of pharmacy practice and chair of the Diversity and Inclusion Pharmacy Committee at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) School of Pharmacy. She is also the coordinator of the university’s Healthcare Diversity Summer Camp. SIUE is a 2014 and 2015 INSIGHT Into Diversity HEED Award recipient. Educating Nurses Across the U.S. Become a Nurse-Midwife or Nurse Practitioner Distance Education Programs: Master of Science in Nursing Doctor of Nursing Practice ADN Bridge Entry Option Post-Master’s Certificate Ranked #1 Nurse -Midwifery Program in the U.S. Learn more about FNU’s online programs at www.frontier.edu/insight insightintodiversity.com 39 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] Scholarship Program Shows Incremental Improvement in Representation of Men, Minorities in Nursing · By Jamaal Abdul-Alim · 40 January/February 2016 When it comes to increasing the proportion of male nurses, leaders in the field say schools of nursing should study the lessons of the New Careers in Nursing (NCIN) scholarship program — perhaps the most large-scale effort to date focused on broadening the diversity of the nursing profession. “W e really have had an impact on changing the face of nursing in terms of bringing many more persons into the profession,” says Vernell P. DeWitty, deputy director of the national program with the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN). Launched in 2008 by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the AACN, NCIN provides scholarships to college graduates without a nursing degree who are enrolled in either an accelerated baccalaureate or master’s nursing program. Through the initiative, 130 schools of nursing have received a total of $35.1 million to award 3,517 scholarships worth $10,000 each. DeWitty says that more than 40 percent of the scholarships have been granted to men. And, in line with the program’s focus on increasing diversity, she says those men have represented many different races, ethnicities, and backgrounds. A 2015 Educational Testing Service (ETS) evaluation of NCIN found that the program has, in fact, contributed to increased diversity in participating nursing schools. The evaluation stated that schools of nursing should “aim to build on the progress seeded by NCIN in the areas of student diversity, cultural competence training, and student support services.” A student in the University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing Financial and Academic Support While men may shy away from nursing for various reasons, they provide unique perspectives and skills that can be crucial to the field, according to the Institute of Medicine’s 2011 report, The Future of Nursing: Leading Health, Advancing Change. While the national average of men in bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) programs is 10 percent, at eight NCIN case study schools, 45 percent of scholarship recipients have been men, according to the ETS evaluation. The program has achieved similar results with minorities. “We have made a concentrated effort to focus on those [groups] to try to increase their percentage in the nursing student population,” says David Krol, a senior program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. NCIN scholarships have helped these students in an area in which not much aid is typically available. Students in second-degree programs like NCIN are not eligible for Pell Grants; thus, NCIN scholarships provide them with much-needed financial assistance. Yet, while scholarships are a large focus of the program, Krol says NCIN’s success is built on much more. “Yes, $10,000 is extremely important and makes a significant difference,” says Krol, “but we feel it is [about] much more than just the money — it is all of the support given to students.” This support includes a pre-entry immersion program that helps students transition into an accelerated nursing program; mentoring, through which students are matched with alumni or school leaders who provide support and guidance throughout the degree program; and leadership development activities, such as guest speaker events at which nursing professionals discuss nursing careers and leadership roles. Program officials have also developed “tool kits” in each of those areas to help schools of nursing increase diversity within their programs. The kits, which are available on the NCIN website, come in the form of step-by-step handbooks. The tool kit on mentoring, for example, is an 88-page guide that touches on topics ranging from how to match a mentor with a student to how to manage issues that might arise in the mentoring relationship. These efforts have benefited many individuals, such as Onome Oskopo, for instance — a former food analytical chemist who decided to go into nursing after working to help individuals with developmental disabilities live independently. That experience led Oskopo, who insightintodiversity.com 41 Onome Oskopo, an NCIN scholarship recipient who is completing a master of science in nursing at the University of Pennsylvania originally hails from Nigeria, to believe he should be helping people instead of working in a lab. “Nursing was the logical choice because it provided an opportunity for direct care, and to influence healthcare in the U.S. and across the world,” says Oskopo, who is currently completing a master of science in nursing in the Adult-Gerontology Primary Care Nurse Practitioner program at the University of Pennsylvania. He is also doing a clinical rotation in the emergency room at the Philadelphia VA Medical Center and serves as a member of the Graduate Nursing Student Academy Policy Committee within the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. Oskopo first learned about the NCIN program when he was accepted to the 12-month accelerated BSN program at Stony Brook University in 2011. He applied for and received a $10,000 NCIN scholarship. “The money was particularly helpful to offset the cost of living during the program,” Oskopo says. 42 January/February 2016 David Krol, a senior program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Beyond the financial assistance, he says the program enabled him to succeed. In particular, he says the pre-immersion program helped him address areas such as stress management, time management, self-care strategies, and strategies for success in an accelerated program. “Frequent meetings with my peers and the program liaison at Stony Brook were a constant source of inspiration, support, and empowerment,” Oskopo says. “The program introduced me to excellent mentors who have greatly shaped my career trajectory in nursing,” he adds. “The program created a platform for me to influence nursing, nursing education, and healthcare in ways I never imagined.” Evaluating Success While the scholarships have had a noticeable impact, just how much of an impact remains uncertain. And while experts seem to agree on the importance of increasing the number of men in nursing professions, they admit that doing so is also accompanied by challenges. An evaluation of the NCIN program states that “men tend to advance more rapidly in the nursing field than their female peers.” It also notes that research has shown that male nurses out-earn female nurses doing the same work. In addition, faculty theorized that some male scholarship recipients didn’t really need the scholarships and would have entered the program regardless. In fact, some male nursing students actually conceded that the scholarship was an “unexpected bonus.” Program leaders say it’s important to keep in mind that while NCIN made a difference, the program’s efforts were relatively small given that the program provided scholarships for only 3,500 students. However, many believe that if schools of nursing were to follow NCIN’s example, the program’s impact could be sustained.● Jamaal Abdul-Alim is a contributing writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. college of nursing Innovative. Inclusive. Now all we need is YOU. UC Nurses. We See Leaders. nursing.uc.edu/innovate JOIN US in leading the transformation of health care. We’d love to talk to you: 1-855-558-1889 insightintodiversity.com 43 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] The University of Alaska Anchorage First-Ever Alaska-Based PharmD Program Will Help Fill Critical Void By Jamaal Abdul-Alim D espite a surplus of pharmacist jobs in Alaska, historically about the only way to get the education needed to qualify for one of those positions has been to leave the state. However, that’s not the easiest thing to do when the nearest state is more than 2,000 miles away. But the situation is set to improve beginning in fall 2016, when the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA).— in partnership with Idaho State University (ISU) — will launch the first-ever Doctor of Pharmacy degree program to be offered in the secluded state. Aside from the fact that students will no longer have to leave Alaska to get a pharmacist education, one of the biggest benefits expected from having a state-based doctor of pharmacy program, or PharmD, is a pharmacist workforce that better reflects the demographics of the local population. 44 January/February 2016 Robert Robl works with test materials in a lab in the ConocoPhillips Integrated Science Building on UAA’s campus. “There’s been a surplus of jobs for many years, so employers have had to rely on temporary pharmacists who fly in from the lower 48 for a certain time period,” says Thomas Wadsworth, an ISU pharmacy professor who recently relocated to Anchorage to serve as assistant dean of Alaska pharmacy programs for ISU. “The problem with that is you can’t expand your clinical pharmacy service with fill-ins. You need permanent professionals in place to develop your patient services and to develop tenure in those services.” The new PharmD program will begin with 15 to 20 students in the first class and each class thereafter. Courses will be taught via “synchronous distance learning technology” that will involve the UAA campus, as well as ISU’s main campus in Pocatello and its other campus in Meridian. “Synchronous means that the professor and students at each delivery site [will] interact with each other in real time,” says Wadsworth. This will be accomplished via twoway videoconferencing. Students and faculty at each site will be able to see and interact with those at the other sites, and faculty will conduct in-person lectures at each participating campus. “This means that one day the lecture might come from a professor who is The School of Pharmacy at ISU physically present in Anchorage but videoconferencing to Pocatello and Meridian; the next day, the lecture might come from a professor who is physically present in Meridian but videoconferencing to Pocatello and Anchorage,” Wadsworth says. He believes the program will enable Alaskans from diverse backgrounds to begin to fill the void suspect there’ll be a greater number of Alaska Natives who might apply.” Although Anchorage is 66 percent white, the rest of the population is quite diverse; specifically, 5.9 percent of residents are African American, 6.9 percent are American Indian or Alaska Native, 8.2 percent are Asian, 2.1 percent are Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, and 9.1 percent are biracial, “Our goal is to provide a venue for this socialization and experiential learning in Anchorage.” Thomas Wadsworth, a pharmacy professor at Idaho State University of pharmacists within the state. “Although it’s not a stated purpose, it’s kind of implied that we are going to be giving preference to residents of this state — whether that means natives of Alaska or … a group that typically didn’t have as great of an opportunity to get this kind of education because they’d have to leave the state, their home culture,” Wadsworth says. “We according to U.S. Census Bureau data. With the city’s diverse population come substantial wealth gaps. For instance, 5.1 percent of whites live in poverty compared with 11.8 percent of African Americans, 14.7 percent of American Indians and Alaska Natives, 13.4 percent of Asians, and 15.9 percent of Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders. insightintodiversity.com 45 The program will place great emphasis on “socialization” of students to provide them with the “requisite interpersonal skills to effectively advocate for their patients with other healthcare providers,” ISU’s website states. “The socialization process occurs during traditional classroom learning, the delivery of community outreach projects, experiential learning, and in small group case studies,” the site explains. “Our goal is to provide a venue for this socialization and experiential learning in Anchorage.” The PharmD program, which takes four years to complete, will cost about $18,000 per semester, or about $144,000 total — ISU’s out-of-state tuition rate. Because the program is technically offered through ISU, a state-funded university, there is no way to waive out-of-state tuition for non-residents of Idaho, according to Wadsworth. However, he notes that more than 100 scholarships are available for pharmacy students to cover program costs. Though the tuition is higher than the average for a pharmacy program at a public university for a state resident ($13,000), it is lower than the average tuition for a private institution ($28,000), according to the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. Still, Wadsworth says going into substantial debt to get a PharmD degree is worthwhile because pharmacists tend to earn hefty salaries. In Alaska, pharmacists enjoy an average annual salary of $105,610, or $50.77 per hour, according to the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development (ADLWD). Currently, there are about 16 job openings per year for pharmacists in Alaska, and the ADLWD expects the occupation to continue to grow at a rapid pace, specifically 25.9 percent, compared with 14.8 percent for all occupations in the state. Wadsworth says job placement rates in the ISU PharmD program are close to 100 percent. In addition, he notes that graduates of the program in Alaska may be able to pay back their loans through the federal student loan repayment program if they secure one of the many federal jobs in the region. “The Indian Health Service, the Bureau of Prisons, and the military all have a very large footprint in Alaska,” Wadsworth says. “And almost all have student loan repayment programs for health professionals.”● Jamaal Abdul-Alim is a contributing writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. Find Your Future AT THE UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF PHARMACY AND SCHOOL OF NURSING In 2015, College Factual ranked Pitt as the best U.S. school to study health professions. We are seeking students and faculty who want to be part of a future where everyone gets the care that they need. SCHOOL OF NURSING • Ranked fifth by U.S. News & World Report • Degree programs leading to the BSN, MSN, DNP, and PhD • Advancing nursing science, education, and practice nursing.pitt.edu SCHOOL OF PHARMACY • Ranked 14th by U.S. News & World Report • Offers PharmD, MS and PhD in Pharmaceutical Sciences, and MS in Pharmacy Business Administration • Personalizes education pharmacy.pitt.edu 46 January/February 2016 “A great university values openness, creativity, and innovation—traits that all benefit from a dynamic and diverse culture.” Patrick Gallagher, Chancellor, University of Pittsburgh [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] Advancing Graduate Nursing Education Through Innovative Programs ++++++++++ As the demand for more nurses with advanced degrees increases, so does enrollment in graduate nursing programs. Because of this, graduate nursing schools are revamping their programs, curricula, and facilities to attract students interested in furthering their education. Here are some that are doing so through innovative programs and practices. The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing The University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing is one of the few schools of nursing in the U.S. to host a dedicated nursing research lab focused on explorations by faculty from diverse disciplines, such as nursing, pharmacy, cardiology, environmental sciences, physiology, and more. At any given time, students in nursing, pre-med, and engineering are likely to be working together with researchers on projects that run the gamut from physiology and nutrition to metabolism and neuroscience. ++++++++++ University of Maryland School of Nursing A renowned leader in graduate nursing education, the University of Maryland School of Nursing offers quality graduate programs (CNL, MS, DNP, and PhD) that provide students with the opportunity to study a wide range of nursing specialties. The school partners with a variety of healthcare agencies in the state of Maryland to offer quality clinical experiences for students, and courses are taught by leading experts in practice, research, and education. To meet the needs of its diverse student body, the School of Nursing offers courses in face-toface, blended formats, making use of the most advanced technology in learning and simulation. insightintodiversity.com 47 Florida State University College of Nursing Today’s healthcare professionals have to be able to provide culturally competent care to patients from around the world. To facilitate this endeavor, the Florida State University (FSU) College of Nursing’s graduate program provides students with opportunities to practice global healthcare in a culturally competent manner by incorporating real-world experiences into its curriculum. Through its “Exploring Grief, Loss, and Trauma in British Culture” course, students have the opportunity to learn about multicultural responses to grief, loss, and trauma. Also, in collaboration with the FSU College of Medicine, students in the nurse practitioner program can travel to Nicaragua and provide medical services to citizens who do not have access to healthcare. While there, students diagnose and treat local citizens for a variety of health-related issues. ++++++++++ Johns Hopkins School of Nursing At the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, graduate programs turn out not just great leaders, but good teammates as well. In the school’s doctoral programs — as well as its master of science in nursing entry into nursing practice and advanced nursing practice tracks — students are drilled on interprofessional cooperation, patient safety, quality of care, and evidencebased practice by nursing faculty, whose evidence continues to establish the norms in those areas. Graduates are prepared to treat anyone, anywhere in the world. Adult gerontology curricula, for instance, focus on innovative, non-pharmacological treatment of dementia and addressing lifelong substance abuse issues. HIV curricula address not only the act of caring, but also its psychological barriers. In addition, students confront their own preconceptions about people they will eventually serve. ++++++++++ University of Cincinnati College of Nursing University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Nursing graduate students can hone clinical skills through innovative, interactive case studies — online modules that follow a practitioner through a clinical scenario that allows for input and immediate feedback. In addition, clinical intensives provide students experience with high-fidelity simulators, providing a safe environment for practice. The college’s extremely talented graduate faculty boasts many awards in innovation and excellence in teaching and research. UC College of Nursing is also part of a major Academic Health Center, allowing for an interprofessional education and strong partnership with some of the nation’s highest-ranked healthcare institutions. UC College of Nursing is a 2015 INSIGHT Into Diversity Higher Education Excellence in Diversity (HEED) Award recipient. 48 January/February 2016 ++++++++++ University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing For 75-plus years, the University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing has led the evolution of nursing education and research in response to the needs of society and patients. Pitt Nursing offers rigorous academic programs grounded in leading-edge research, preparing students for evidence-based practice. The school created specialtyfocused doctor of nursing practice programs to ensure students have appropriate clinical skills and comprehensive knowledge of the evidence base in specific practice areas. Students benefit from the school’s strong links to world-class clinical systems, as well as the many research institutes at the university, which is a member of the Association of American Universities. Designated a “Nursing Research-Intensive Environment” by the National Institutes of Health, Pitt Nursing also offers a PhD program that matches students with outstanding faculty scholars. ++++++++++ LEAD Leadership & Learning Engagement Advocacy Diversity & Inclusion www.aacn.nche.edu insightintodiversity.com 49 [ Special Report: Nursing and Pharmacy ] On the Mend Online Pharmacy Programs Bring Education, Practitioners to Rural America Pharmacy students at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. By Madeline Szrom T he Pharmacy Manpower Project, Inc., projects that by 2020, there will be a deficit of nearly 157,000 pharmacists in the U.S., according to its report Professionally Determined Need for Pharmacy Services in 2020. The effects of low enrollment in pharmacy schools are already being felt across the country, particularly in rural areas. According to U.S. Census Bureau data from 2010, people living in rural areas account for 19.3 percent of the total U.S. population, yet the National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine has found that only 12 50 January/February 2016 percent of the nation’s pharmacists practice in these regions. To improve these figures, and the quality of care for patients in rural areas, some colleges and universities have focused on expanding distance learning programs to provide increased access to pharmacy education for students in even the most remote areas. While several schools and colleges of pharmacy offer online classes, Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., has the only accredited, full-time online pharmacy program. In 2001, the university launched the Doctor of Pharmacy Distance Program.— with grants from the National Community Pharmacists Association — to lead more students toward careers in pharmacy. “We really reached out to those students who had a lifelong dream of being part of the pharmacy team, but couldn’t relate,” says Zara Risoldi Cochrane, director of the program and associate professor in Creighton’s Department of Pharmacy Practice. “We found a good foothold for rural communities and were able to reach students in more remote areas. The benefits were that we were able to address healthcare needs in these areas as well.” Filling a Need For many people living in rural areas, higher education is not necessarily the next step after high school. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, only 18 percent of people living in rural areas have at least a four-year degree, and only 6 percent have an advanced degree. Creighton is hoping to change this situation and attract more individuals to the pharmacy field by providing an easily accessible, and affordable, education. Students from across the country who are enrolled in the university’s distance program experience their entire education from the comfort of home, except for a few trips to Creighton’s campus. Courses are available to students through video-capture technology, which works to keep them engaged by providing activities, such as multiple choice questions and quizzes, all while the professor is teaching. Students are able to flag troublesome or confusing lectures and post questions in real time, giving professors insight into how well their students comprehend aspects of the curriculum. “It allows us that two-way feedback, which is important to what we do,” Risoldi Cochrane says. “We can’t be successful unless we understand where students are succeeding.” In addition, all exams are administered through an online proctoring service that students connect to through their personal computers. Using webcam monitors, the system is able to detect whether they are cheating on tests by using their notes or textbooks. Online proctors also conduct basic troubleshooting procedures and are prepared to assist students if the system experiences technical difficulties. Creighton has developed effective ways to ensure that students are receiving not only a quality education, but also academic support as they work to complete the program. “We hire mentors, similar to teaching assistants, who live and work across the country, and they [provide] additional support for online students,” Risoldi Cochrane says. “They communicate through Skype so students don’t have to worry about time differences, and there is always someone available to respond to their needs.” This system allows participants to engage with one another across long distances, sharing experiences and learning to work together. Students also get the opportunity to meet face to face. Each summer, those enrolled in the online program meet on Creighton’s campus for two weeks to participate in handson patient care training and an evaluation. Risoldi Cochrane says that it is important for them to interact with one another to further build communications skills — an integral aspect of the pharmacy profession. Students in Creighton’s doctor of pharmacy program are required to enroll in clinicals during their fourth year. To accommodate distance learners, the university created a team of faculty and staff to set up, monitor, and manage clinical rotations in each student’s hometown. “Students are getting real-life experience in the communities where Above: Creighton University pharmacy students Right: Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. insightintodiversity.com 51 Students in the University of Kansas pharmacy program they are living,” Risoldi Cochrane says. “Our team communicates with [their clinical] site and ensures there is an educational plan for the student, and we train the [pharmacists running the clinicals] to give feedback and provide management.” Through its distance learning program, Creighton aims to help fill the pharmacist gap in underserved regions. “Many of our distance students are located in areas where there is a deficit in pharmacists,” Risoldi Cochrane says. “We’re attempting to meet that need.” Creighton’s Pharmacy Assessment Committee has conducted extensive research on students’ success after graduation, including where they find employment. Results have shown that graduates from rural areas tend to stay in those regions, revealing the important role the distance program is playing in increasing service in areas in need. “There are several counties that are so rural, so remote, that there are no healthcare providers,” Risoldi Cochrane says. “[The program] gives students the opportunity to practice pharmacy … as they cater to the needs of their own communities.” 52 January/February 2016 KU’s School of Pharmacy, housed on the university’s main campus in Lawrence Alternative Distance Learning Models While Creighton may currently have the only full-time online pharmacy program, many universities are doing more to expand their online presence to reach more potential pharmacy students. The University of Kansas (KU) pharmacy program is the only one in the state and is offered through the university’s main campus in Lawrence; however, the use of live-transmission lectures allows the university to expand its reach to students on the Wichita campus, KU’s newest extension. “We wanted to reach across the state better,” says Kenneth Audus, dean of the School of Pharmacy. Audus says the university decided streaming lectures would be the best way to provide education to students in Wichita from KU’s main campus. In addition to the system allowing students to listen to lectures in real time, it also allows for interaction between professors and distance pharmacy majors. Students are paired together during lectures and use a desktop microphone to communicate with professors during the transmission; as they log in, their pictures appear on the professor’s screen, helping ensure attendance. This format also enables students to be active in discussion and ask questions as they arise. Students are required to purchase an iPad, which allows professors to take attendance in seconds and provides students access to notes and lectures any time using Blackboard, an online educational management system. Audus says the school’s efforts to attract more students across the state to pharmacy education have contributed to the university’s placing more pharmacists in rural areas throughout Kansas. “Kansas has 105 counties, and seven of them didn’t have a pharmacist or a pharmacy,” he says. “Now, we’ve brought that down to two.” While some students express the desire to stay in urban areas, faculty in KU’s School of Pharmacy encourage them to consider jobs in rural communities by emphasizing the demand in those areas. During winter breaks, the school takes students to small-town pharmacies across the state to show them where they are needed. The University of Cincinnati (UC) in Ohio is also working to expand the reach of pharmacy education. In January 2016, UC’s College of Pharmacy will be adding to its offerings an online certificate and master’s degree program in pharmacy management. These programs are geared toward people who already hold a pharmacy degree but would like to become a leader in the industry. “For a pharmacist who wants to receive additional training in management, their options would be an MBA program or a master’s in health administration,” says Neil MacKinnon, a professor and dean of the UC College of Pharmacy. “There’s nothing pharmacy-related, but now, with these programs, they can learn how to inspire and manage people in the field.” The online master’s degree program in pharmacy leadership will be the first of its kind in the nation, and since it will allow students to earn their degree from anywhere, those already practicing in rural areas won’t be forced to leave their communities. MacKinnon explains that many advanced pharmacy programs are intense, full-time commitments, meaning that students would have to quit their jobs in order to complete them. However, with UC’s new online programs, this isn’t necessarily the case. In addition, UC’s current pharmacy programs provide recorded lectures, like those at Creighton and KU, so students can listen to them at a time that works for their schedules. According to MacKinnon, who was previously the director of the Arizona Center for Rural Health, each state works to analyze where healthcare practitioners are needed and recognizes the demand for more in rural areas. He believes online programs have the potential to bridge this gap. “[Online] programs have the ability to reach pharmacists,” MacKinnon says. “We’ve developed these to be [completed] anywhere in the world, and that provides the opportunity for more education for pharmacists who would otherwise have to give up their current lives.” Although online programs like these may not be able to eliminate the projected pharmacist deficit, pharmacy schools are showing that using technology to increase educational access and opportunities can have a positive impact on the future of pharmacy education and practice — especially in rural communities.● Madeline Szrom is a contributing writer for INSIGHT Into Diversity. Strong on Academics Strong on Service Strong on Values Regis University’s School of Pharmacy proudly supports the celebration of diversity TO LEARN MORE: regis.edu/pharmacy • 303.458.4344 • [email protected] insightintodiversity.com 53 Spring Semester Career Guide How to Build a HighPerforming, Diverse and Inclusive Super A-Team By Joseph Santana A ccording to a recent study by the Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp), highperforming organizations place a higher premium on workforce diversity and inclusion than their lower-performing competitors. The study also revealed that in these better-performing organizations, the company places a higher value on the ability of leaders to work effectively with diverse stakeholders. Leaders and hiring managers may scratch their heads, wondering what this means and how it correlates with other important hiring factors. It’s well understood that the best teams are composed of people who bring a variety of perspectives and cognitive approaches. That intuitively makes sense, but what about being qualified or being a good fit 54 January/February 2016 with the rest of the team? Aren’t those even more important? These questions are often posed as if these factors were mutually exclusive. But they are three distinct elements of a team, which, if properly optimized, will yield the type of high-performing, super A-team that the highestperforming organizations around the globe are known for. Consider a company like Disney, for example. Disney hires people who have the core skills needed to be cooks, greeters, performers, tour guides, and so on. These employees, who come from all parts of the world, bring a multitude of formative experiences and cognitive approaches. Yet, these diverse, multiskilled individuals all share a common characteristic that makes them work effectively in teams. They have aligned motivations that support one mission: to provide guests with an extraordinary experience. That, in a nutshell, is the magic formula — bringing together groups of qualified individuals with diverse perspectives whose motivations align around a shared outcome. That’s what results in powerful A-teams. In these teams, the members possess the required job skills, a range of cognitive tools, and a shared motivation for why they do what they do. (For more about this “why,” read Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action by Simon Sinek. The book makes a great case for the importance of teaming up with those who share and support your “why.” Or, if you are short on time and looking for an 18-minute overview, check out Sinek’s TED Talk Start with Why.) So, what can you do to build your own high-performing, diverse and inclusive super A-team? How can you optimize each of these factors in ways that will result in a super A-team? First, make sure you hire and promote people who possess the basic job skills. A required skill, unlike a preferred characteristic, is something that someone must have in order to perform a particular job. For example, the ability to program in the C-language is a requirement for a C-programmer. One of the best ways to determine if a candidate has the required skills is to obtain a work sample. There are many ways to do this. Some software do well hiring and promoting people who are dedicated to and motivated by the thought of helping society grow through access to resources. There are many assessments available online that will help you determine what motivates a candidate’s behavior. Make sure these motivations, or why a person does what he or she does, align with your organizational mission. If they don’t, no matter how well a candidate meets the job skill requirements, I recommend you pass on that hire. Finally, strive to increase the richness of the cognitive diversity you have on your team. Mark Miller, vice president of marketing at organizational pool capabilities across the team. So, once you find candidates who have the required skills and who are aligned with your mission, strive to broaden your cognitive diversity and put in place the tools needed to support effective, inclusive collaboration across your highly diverse team. “Recognizing the need for cognitive diversity is critical, but the activation of different perspectives is what takes teams and organizations to high performance,” Miller says. “Collaboration becomes a tool to access a company’s ‘why’ in more distinctive and boundless ways, and that means organizations are more aligned [both] internally and externally with their customers.” That, in a nutshell, is the magic formula — bringing together groups of qualified individuals with diverse perspectives whose motivations align around a shared outcome. That’s what results in powerful A-teams. companies ask prospective team members for a sample of their past work that approximates what he or she will be expected to do for the company. When examining this component, focus solely on judging the person’s output and determining if it meets your requirements for the job. Next, make sure that your candidate is aligned around a “why” that will support your company and team’s core mission. If your company exists to make computing power available to the everyday person, you don’t want to hire someone whose core motivating “why” is to create a strong class distinction between the technical haves and have-nots. On the other hand, if your company’s mission is to create and distribute new, affordable, and accessible forms of energy, you might development company Emergenetics International, recently published an article — titled “Improve Teamwork by Utilizing Cognitive Collaboration”.— in which he stresses the importance of avoiding the Maslow’s Hammer effect, which occurs when a team takes a singular groupthink approach because members are too cognitively homogeneous — that is, every problem appears to be a nail because everyone has a cognitive hammer. Miller — whose company has identified seven distinct thinking and behavioral styles, as well as a number of behavioral attributes — strongly recommends building teams that include all of these styles and attributes. Emergenetics International also offers tools aimed at maximizing collaboration between these styles so as to effectively In today’s highly competitive, rapidly evolving business ecosystems, no organization can afford to have teams on which any member lacks the skills, commitment, or cognitive breadth of vision and perspective needed to create a super A-team. By optimizing each of these factors effectively, any new or existing team can quickly transform into one that meets the opportunities and challenges of the 21st century. It can become a high-performing, diverse and inclusive super A-team.● Joseph Santana is chairman of the Institute for Corporate Productivity’s (i4cp) Chief Diversity Officer Board and president of Joseph Santana, LLC. He is also a member of the INSIGHT Into Diversity Editorial Board. For more about Joe, visit joesantana.com. insightintodiversity.com 55 Spring Semester Career Guide Dear Employer, Diversity Matters By Phyllis Finley A growing number of organizations and their leadership teams are acknowledging the importance of diversity and inclusion and the impact they can have on business performance. In fact, research by professional services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers revealed that 85 percent of CEOs whose organizations have a diversity and inclusion strategy say it has enhanced employee performance. That is why companies are developing innovative programming to ensure that diversity is an important part of their culture, starting from the top of the company down. One example is multinational food services and facilities management company Sodexo. According to the book Why You Should Do More Than just Talk About Workplace Diversity by Susan Medina and Peter Gomez, Sodexo ties 25 percent of top executives’ bonuses and up to 15 percent of senior management’s bonuses to meeting diversity goals, demonstrating the company’s view of diversity as a business imperative. The desire to work for a company that values diversity and inclusion is shared by many employees and job candidates. Numerous studies show that an employer’s commitment to diversity and inclusion is especially important 56 January/February 2016 to younger generations now entering the workforce, such as Generation Z (people born in the mid to late ’90s), and is weighted heavily in their decisions of whether to join a company. Not surprisingly, the same is true of minority groups. According to a 2014 survey by Glassdoor Inc., 72 percent of women consider workforce diversity an important factor when evaluating companies and job offers. Also in the survey, 89 percent of African American, 80 percent of Asian, and 70 percent of Latino respondents said the diversity of a company’s workforce is important to them. These findings should serve as a wakeup call for employers, especially given that Generation Z will be the most ethnically diverse group to ever enter the U.S. workforce, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. To these workers, a diverse workforce will be assumed a given because they understand the value of diversity. Furthermore, companies hoping to remain competitive in the marketplace will need to tap into the growing buying power of minority groups. A study by the University of Georgia’s Selig Center for Economic Growth showed that African Americans, Asians, and Native Americans have a collective buying power of $2 trillion.— 117 percent higher than the $916 billion they had available to spend in the year 2000. Having a diverse workforce that understands the needs and desires of an organization’s diverse customer base will be a differentiator for businesses in the future. So, how does one evaluate an employer’s commitment to diversity? There are several ways to determine if an employer truly embraces diversity as a business imperative: • Forbes, Fortune, and other national publications compile annual lists of businesses recognized for their diversity policies and programs. Actively search for these lists and read them carefully to uncover why those particular businesses shine within the realm of diversity and inclusion. • Take time to visit a company’s website to learn about its philosophy regarding diversity. Does it have a page dedicated to diversity? Does it publicize a formal diversity policy? Has it participated in any diversityrelated programs or events? Look for mention of established, measurable programs that foster an inclusive environment or employee resource groups focused around issues of common interest, such as ethnicity, disability, or women in leadership. These types of programs can help you determine if a company values diversity as a competitive advantage beyond simply sponsoring events. • Turn to social media and online communities to uncover even more information about an employer’s diversity practices. You may find criticism for a lack of commitment to diversity or kudos for a well-run program. However, keep in mind that both praise and criticism may include bias. Executives who are on the hiring side of the table must ensure that diversity initiatives are part of the company’s brand and are communicated effectively both internally and externally. Often, employees simply aren’t aware of a company’s efforts and philosophy, and many are unsure how to get involved. Businesses should be as transparent as possible, acknowledging areas of strength, as well as areas for opportunity and improvement. Companies that establish formal employee or business resource groups to further collaboration of diverse teams should effectively communicate these offerings to employees. Attracting diverse talent and consistently looking for areas for improvement will add value across the company. For example, according to a 2008 Gallup Poll, when employees perceive that their employer and its leadership team are committed to diversity, they are more likely to stay with the company, more likely to recommend the company to others, less likely to miss days at work, and more likely to be engaged in their work. Diversity and inclusion are gaining more importance in the workplace as research shows that more job seekers are beginning to heavily evaluate employers’ commitment to diversity in their job searches. Just having programs in place is not enough; it is essential to communicate the existence of these programs both internally and externally. Shout it from the rooftops and into cyberspace. Companies should also ensure that both employees and job candidates are aware of their efforts and the ways in which they can get involved, because without measures in place to communicate programs and drive engagement, organizations simply cannot capture the true value of their diversity initiatives.● Phyllis Finley is the executive vice president of diversity and inclusion with Randstad North America. TheDepartmentofOB/GynattheRobertC.ByrdHealthSciencesCenterofWestVirginiaUniversity-Charleston Division,isrecruitinganadditionalfull-timenon-tenuredfacultymembertojoinouracademicallyoriented Maternal-FetalMedicineDivision. Job requirements are: •MD,DOdegreeorforeignequivalentdegreefroman accreditedprogram •BCinOB/GynandBE/BCinMaternal-FetalMedicine •Possessaptitudeandpassionforeducatingresidentsand medicalstudents •Willingnesstoparticipateinappropriateacademic,clinical researchorotherscholarlyactivityasmayberequiredof clinicalfaculty •Proficientinobstetricalultrasoundandprenataldiagnosis Benefits include: •24-hourin-houseneonatologistinLevelIIINICU •Onlyfreestandingwomenandchildren’shospitalin the state •ExcellentbenefitspackagewithgenerousPTO •Academicrankandsalarycommensuratewithqualifications andexperience •Vibrantcommunity •Superbfamilyenvironment •Unsurpassedrecreationalactivities •Outstandingschoolsystems Thesearchwillremainopenuntilasuitablecandidateis identified. Toapply,[email protected]. WVU is an EEO/Affirmative Action Employer – Minority/Female/Disability/Veteran 30468-J15 insightintodiversity.com 57 TM ConnectingSpring Diverse Professionals Diverse Careers Semesterto Career Guide Assistant/Associate Professor (tenure track): The School of Nursing (SON), located in downtown Atlanta, invites applicants for full-time, tenure track faculty positions. Responsibilities of these 9-month tenure track positions include developing or continuing a program of health-related funded research, participating in scholarly activities, and teaching in the undergraduate, and/ or graduate programs. Other responsibilities include student advisement and mentoring, and involvement in school, university and community services. The successful candidate will possess evidence of a focused area of research. The SON provides collaborative opportunities with many GSU Centers and Institutes on Urban Health, Health Disparities, Heal Policy and Law, Gerontology, Obesity and Biomedical Sciences. The University of Utah, Department of Pathology is seeking a Clinical Immunologist at ARUP Laboratories, an enterprise of the University of Utah. The successful candidate will have a faculty appointment in the Department of Pathology at the rank of Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, or Professor in either the clinical or tenure tracks, depending on the qualifications of the candidate. Minimum qualifications include: 1)PhD or equivalent doctoral degree, nursing preferred but others in health related fields considered [e.g. biostatistics, psychology, social work, public health] 2) a master's in nursing or equivalent degree. Certification as an advanced practice RN and teaching experience desirable. Competitive compensation package with startup funds available. Log #s: 16-064, 16-065 Salt Lake City, Utah is diverse and vibrant and offers numerous opportunities for an active lifestyle in a spectacular natural environment. Nominations/applications are encouraged. Completed applications for these tenure track positions, including a letter of application, vitae, and contact information for three professional references, should be emailed to: [email protected] CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Further information may be obtained by viewing SON website at http://snhp.gsu.edu/ or contacting Dr. Dawn Aycock at [email protected] Georgia State University, a unit of the University System of Georgia, is an equal opportunity educational institution and an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer and accommodates individuals with disabilities. All applicants must comply with the Immigration Reform and Control Act. Women and minorities are strongly encouraged to apply. An offer of employment will be contingent upon successful completion of a background report. The School of Nursing at Sacramento State University invites applications for a full time Maternal Child tenure-track position beginning in August 2016. To view the full description and apply for this position, please visit: http://www. csus.edu/about/employment/ We also invite applications for a pool of temporary applicants. Instructions can be found at: http://www.csus.edu/ hr/facultyvacancies/Cont_Open_PT_ Vacancies_rev10.15.pdf All offers of employment are subject to, and contingent upon, confirmation of work eligibility, satisfactory completion of all pre-employment background checks, and Board of Registered Nursing approval. Sacramento State encourages applicants from every race, gender, color, ethnicity and national origin, as well as veterans and the disabled, to ensure that all qualified individuals have an equal opportunity for employment at the University. 58 January/February 2016 Clinical responsibilities include interpretation of laboratory results, consultation with physicians, resident and fellow education, and quality control and quality assurance. Ample opportunities are available for collaboration with world-class research groups at the University of Utah School of Medicine, and the Huntsman Cancer Institute. ARUP is a full service reference laboratory with clients from more than half of the nation’s university teaching and children’s hospitals, major commercial laboratories, military and government facilities, and many community hospitals. As such, the laboratory sees a broad range of specimen types and indications and offers a range of testing options in multiple areas of immunology, including autoimmunity, allergy, primary and secondary immunodeficiency, cellular and innate immunity, protein immunology, transplantation, microbial immunology, immunogenicity to biological, hepatitis and retroviral infections, and cancer immunotherapy,among others. The applicant should hold an M.D. and/or Ph.D. degree, and be board certified/eligible in Clinical Pathology by the American Board of Pathology or be board certified/eligible in Clinical Immunology by the American Board of Medical Laboratory Immunology. Applicants should submit electronically to http://utah.peopleadmin.com/postings/47256 a curriculum vitae, a brief cover letter and the names and addresses of three references. For more information please contact Allison Boyer, [email protected] For more information on the University and ARUP Laboratories, see www.utah.edu, or www.aruplab.com. The University of Utah Health Sciences Center is a patient focused center distinguished by collaboration, excellence, leadership, and respect. The University of Utah Health Sciences Center values candidates who are committed to fostering and furthering the culture of compassion, collaboration, innovation, accountability, diversity, integrity, quality, and trust that is integral to the mission of the University of Utah Health Sciences Center. The University of Utah is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity employer and does not discriminate based upon race, national origin, color, religion, sex, age, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, status as a person with a disability, genetic information, or Protected Veteran status. Individuals from historically underrepresented groups, such as minorities, women, qualified persons with disabilities and protected veterans are encouraged to apply. Veterans’ preference is extended to qualified applicants, upon request and consistent with University policy and Utah state law. Upon request, reasonable accommodations in the application process will be provided to individuals with disabilities. To inquire about the University’s nondiscrimination or affirmative action policies or to request disability accommodation, please contact: Director, Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action, 201 S. Presidents Circle, Rm 135, (801) 581-8365. The University of Utah values candidates who have experience working in settings with students from diverse backgrounds, and possess a strong commitment to improving access to higher education for historically underrepresented students. AVAILABLE TENURE TRACK FACULTY POSITION Searching for a candidate for a tenure-track position, 10-month appointment, beginning 8/1/16. Eligible for rank of assistant professor and licensure as RN in Kentucky. Qualified applicant must hold an earned PhD in nursing or related field with a master’s degree in nursing preferred. Must have a beginning focused area of research which can be integrated with teaching. Candidate will be supported to obtain further extramural research funding, and will receive a startup package. EEO/AA. Applicants must apply online: www.louisville.edu/jobs. (Job ID 32237) LOUISIANA TECH UNIVERSITY School of Agricultural Sciences and Forestry Director and Chief Academic Officer; Review of applications begins February 15, 2016. For complete position announcement, contact Bill Campbell (campbell@latech. edu) or http://finance.latech.edu/ hr/vacan2336.php Member of the University of Louisiana System. AA/EEO. Connecting Diverse Professionals to Diverse CareersTM INSIGHT Into Diversity Giving Back DIVERSITY LEADERSHIP AWARD INSIGHT Into Diversity recognizes the importance of being a leader on campus, and we want to honor those who go above and beyond their everyday duties to "give back" to their institution and community. Help Us Honor Your President or Chancellor Nominate your president or chancellor for the Giving Back Award by Jan. 22, 2016. All honorees will be featured in the April 2016 Leadership Support and Giving Back Awards issue of INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine. insightintodiversity.com/giving-back-award Our Next Issue: March 2016 College Athletics In our March issue, we will explore athletic programs at colleges and universities across the country, as well as the role diversity plays across teams and leagues. In addition, we will examine the efforts of national sports leagues to increase diversity and ensure the inclusion of people from all backgrounds and underrepresented populations. Also in this issue, we will be celebrating Women’s History Month. The advertising deadline is February 2. For advertising information, contact Donald Washington at 301-529-9503 or [email protected]. The Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Utah School of Medicine is seeking qualified Anesthesiologists in the areas of Perioperative Echocardiography, Critical Care, Pediatric Anesthesia, and Pain Medicine to join the faculty, providing exceptional clinical care, teaching and research at the University of Utah, John Moran Eye Center, University Orthopedic Center, and other clinical sites as needed. Applicants must be Board Certified or Board Eligible in Anesthesiology. Successful candidates will receive a faculty appointment on the clinical track in the Department of Anesthesiology. Rank will be dependent on qualifications. The candidate is responsible for faculty coverage on all general inpatient and outpatient teams. The candidate will be closely involved in the creation, implementation and evaluation of multidisciplinary care process models aimed at improving patient care. The candidate will be actively involved in medical student and resident teaching in the inpatient and outpatient settings. Interested candidates must demonstrate a strong desire for exemplary teaching. CAREER OPPORTUNITIES To request a nomination form, email [email protected]. For additional questions or information, email [email protected]. University of Utah Department of Anesthesiology Opportunities exist to conduct research in a variety of areas including education, outcomes/quality improvement, medical informatics and clinical projects. Faculty are encouraged to develop relationships within the Department and with other Departments and Colleges to foster research through collaboration. To apply, applicants should submit a CV at the following link: http://utah.peopleadmin.com/postings/47386 Inquiries may be directed to: Jeffrey Mann, Program Manager, Department of Anesthesiology, [email protected], 801-585-0778 The University of Utah Health Sciences Center is a patient focused center distinguished by collaboration, excellence, leadership, and Respect. The University of Utah HSC values candidates who are committed to fostering and furthering the culture of compassion, collaboration, innovation, accountability, diversity, integrity, quality, and trust that is integral to the mission of the University of Utah Health Sciences Center. The University of Utah is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer and educator and its policies prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, religion, age, status as a person with a disability, or veteran’s status. Minorities, women, veterans, and those with disabilities are strongly encouraged to apply. Veterans’ preference is extended to qualified veterans. To inquire further about the University’s nondiscrimination and affirmative action policies or to request a reasonable accommodation for a disability in the application process, please contact the following individual who has been designated as the University’s Title IX/ADA/Section 504 Coordinator: Director, Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action, 201 South Presidents Circle, Rm. 135, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, (801)581-8365, email: [email protected]. insightintodiversity.com 59 Spring Semester Career Guide The Nontraditional Workweek: Embracing Workplace Flexibility as a Business Imperative By Alexandra Vollman A s the line between Americans’ work and non-work lives continues to blur, employers are more than ever seeing the value in offering flexible workplace arrangements to attract and retain a diverse and talented workforce. Though offering flexible work arrangements was historically framed as a women’s issue, it is now viewed as more of a human issue, with men actually reporting higher and more frequent utilization rates (once a week or more) than women, according to the 2015 Work-Life Survey by the American Psychological Association’s (APA) Center for Organizational Excellence. Currently 51 percent of Americans report working for employers that offer some type of workplace flexibility. While flexible arrangements may vary by organization and industry, their overall purpose is to give employees more choices, and more say, in their schedules — representing a shift from the traditional nine-to-five workweek. “For a long time, our employment 60 January/February 2016 policies in this country focused on very rigid schedules — the idea of ‘punching a clock’ that people just grew accustomed to. So [offering flexible workplace arrangements] is about embracing change, thinking about working differently,” says Lisa Horn, director of Workplace Flexibility Initiatives with the Society for Human Resources Management (SHRM). Horn oversees SHRM’s strategic initiative When Work Works, a project.— in partnership with the Families and Work Institute.— that provides employers and human resources (HR) professionals with the tools, research, and effective practices for adopting flexible workplace arrangements. “The way we define a flexible work arrangement is really talking about how, when, and where work gets done,” she says. “So [this may include] flextime and flex-place; it can be part-time arrangements, part-year arrangements, job shares, compressed workweeks, alternate start and stop times. … It’s basically giving employees some level of autonomy over how, when, and where they get their work done.” These individualized workplace arrangements, and the companies that offer them, appeal to a wide range of workers.— from millennials to working parents to baby boomers, as well as people from a variety of backgrounds, lifestyles, and situations. And as working Americans increasingly report a better fit between their work and personal lives, according to the APA’s survey, both employees and companies are reaping the benefits. “When you work for an organization that you truly believe cares about you as an individual and as a person, and provides the resources you need to be at your best, then … you are willing to give more to that organization,” says David W. Ballard, head of the APA’s Center for Organizational Excellence. “So what they’re committing to you affects how willing you are to make commitments to [them].” For Ballard, who designs and directs David W. Ballard, head of the APA’s Center for Organizational Excellence, presents an overview of the “Psychologically Healthy Workplace Model” to psychologists and business leaders at the APA’s Ninth Annual Psychologically Healthy Workplace Awards ceremony in 2014. (Photo credit: Larry Canner Photography via the APA) efforts related to health and well-being “Employers that embrace these in the workplace, the business case for types of work strategies certainly are offering flexible workplace arrangements putting themselves at a competitive is obvious. In addition to helping advantage.— and I think that trend is improve both the mental and physical only going to grow, and it complements health of employees who use them, an organization’s diversity and inclusion they have been proven strategy,” Horn says. to contribute to lower “Oftentimes, there’s a levels of stress, higher job way for HR professionals satisfaction, and increased to position flexibility to morale. suggest that there’s great In turn, these marked synergy between that and improvements within a [a company’s] diversity company’s workforce have strategy.” a positive impact on the organization itself. The Best Talent for a “Employers have found Better Workforce David W. Ballard that giving employees Attracting, retaining, and control over decisions accommodating a diverse [around] the way they get work done on and talented workforce is what global a day-to-day basis improves the quality professional services firm Deloitte of work life and the quality of home life Services LLP is all about. For more for people,” Ballard says. “Those things than a decade, the company has been are, in turn, linked to better business offering flexible work arrangements to outcomes: higher productivity, lower its 225,000-strong workforce. absenteeism, and lower turnover.” “It’s all about creating an irresistible Because of the many benefits they organization and appealing to the provide on both sides of the table, broadest pool of talent possible,” says flexible workplace arrangements are Carolyn O’Boyle, talent director for increasingly being viewed less as an Talent Strategy and Innovation with employee perk and more as a strategic Deloitte. “I think this is the way the business imperative. workforce wants to work, and if you want to continue to be a leader in terms of talent — getting the best talent, having them feel a relationship [with] and a connection back to your organization — if you want to be irresistible, you’ve got to be responsive to the changing needs of [the workforce].” By taking a personal and individualized approach, Deloitte is able to offer employees flexibility while ensuring predictability — crucial elements toward ensuring that an arrangement works for both employee and employer. “We try to work with every person to figure out what works for them, simply because everyone has very unique needs,” says O’Boyle, “and what works for me isn’t going to work for you, and what works for me today might not work for me a year from now.” Although O’Boyle says offerings vary based on an individual’s situation, as well as what is important to an employee (coaching a son or daughter’s sports team, for instance), Deloitte’s typical alternative work arrangements include compressed workweeks (40 hours completed in four days instead of five), flextime (no set schedule), telecommuting, and part-time or seasonal hours, among others. Another, related initiative, developed and implemented in summer 2015, is the Deloitte Open Talent (DOT) platform; its purpose is to build a diverse pool of talent in the form of freelance and contract workers. “[It’s] been a priority and focus for us over the past 18 months as we seek to build an attractive way to engage with those types of workers — really a recognition that a growing population of people across all different generations are interested in that type of work arrangement,” O’Boyle says. “They don’t necessarily want to be with the same company in a full-time capacity. They want the flexibility that comes with [this] type of employment structure.” DOT connects different departments within Deloitte with individuals of insightintodiversity.com 61 [ moreINSIGHT ] Common Flexible Workplace Arrangements Compressed workweek Full-time employees work longer days for part of the week or pay period in exchange for shorter days, or a day off, each week or pay period. Telecommuting Employees work remotely from home, a satellite location, or anywhere from one day a week to full time. Flextime with “core hours” Employees choose their work hours within limits established by the employer. They must work full time and be present on a daily basis during “core hours” (for example, an employer may require that employees be present from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.). Job sharing Two or more employees share the responsibilities, accountability, and compensation of one full-time job. Transition period, part time Employees gradually return to work after a major life event (e.g., the birth or adoption of a child) by working part time for a set period of time and eventually returning to work full time. Part-year or seasonal work Employees work only a certain number of months per year. Phased retirement Employees reduce their schedule and/or responsibilities prior to full retirement. Source: Society for Human Resource Management, Workplace Flexibility in the 21st Century 62 January/February 2016 all backgrounds and abilities — from people with expertise in Web design to those with analytics skills — in order to quickly and easily pull them in on projects, as needed. O’Boyle says the company’s open talent pool is composed of people of all ages, backgrounds, expertise, and lifestyles. She believes DOT helps bring a variety of perspectives to the table that Deloitte may not have otherwise had access to. “There are a lot of millennials in that pool. There are also a fair amount of baby boomers who are getting ready to retire but aren’t quite ready to fully pull out of the marketplace yet; they’re looking to stay engaged in certain ways, and open talent becomes a nice way for them to do that,” she says. “So I think that opening up the talent pool is a way for us to have a lot more diversity, whether it’s diversity in backgrounds or cognitive diversity.” Effective Flexibility While both Horn and Ballard recommend the adoption of flexible workplace arrangements, they also emphasize that when it comes to individual companies, one size does not fit all. Because organizations and their needs, as well as the needs of each of their employees, vary greatly, Horn says that “flexible flexibility” is key. “There are no two organizations that are the same, and … sometimes what flexible work arrangement will work in one department or division at an organization won’t work in another job division within that organization,” she says. “So we talk oftentimes about effective flexibility; the way we define that is, in order for the flexible work arrangement to be effective, it has to work for both the employer and the employee.” However, she says that a company’s ability to offer alternative work arrangements depends on its culture and, in part, the industry in which it operates. At Deloitte, O’Boyle says that what began as a “very programmatic” initiative focused on a reduced work schedule has since evolved into a “cultural expectation” by employees. Yet while half of all Americans report having access to flexible work arrangements, only 25 percent report using these work-life benefits one or more times per month. According to Ballard, this lack of use is due to the stigma associated with not completing work on-site. “There is still a feeling that if you’re not physically at your desk, in front of your computer at work, that that’s going to be viewed negatively — sort of out of sight, out of mind — or that managers or supervisors might think you are not as committed to your job or to the organization,” he says. “So people are sometimes reluctant to use those flexible work arrangements because they are afraid [doing so is] going to hurt their opportunities for advancement or [affect] their performance ratings. “The unfortunate reality is there has been some research that suggests that supervisors at times do assign lower performance ratings to people who are not physically on the job, despite the fact that their actual performance might Education not be lower.” Ballard believes the solution to this dilemma lies in how managers are trained. Because most supervisors are trained to manage workers by watching them, many are unprepared and unsure how to manage a remote and flexible workforce, he says. “The challenge is figuring out ways to measure performance and to supervise and manage employees who may not be sitting at a desk from nine to five,” he says. “So we need to find better ways to evaluate and measure what it is they are accomplishing on the job.” In addition to properly trained managers, organizations need to have structures in place to provide remote workers the tools and technology assistance needed to adequately do “It takes the right employees with the right skill set, and the right job with the right support from the organization to be able to work effectively. So it is not easy to do, but when it’s done well, it has really good results.” David W. Ballard, head of the APA’s Center for Organizational Excellence 63208 Insight Oakton Community College 3.50” x 9.75” Helen Aleksandra Insertion Order Newspaper Client Dimensions A.E. Artist ESROCK RECRUITMENT ADVERTISING their jobs. However, Ballard also emphasizes the need for employees to meet certain criteria as well. “People need the skills to be able to work flexibly; they need to have the self-motivation and organizational skills,” he says. “It takes the right employees with the right skill set, and the right job with the right support from the organization to be able to work effectively. So it is not easy to do, but when it’s done well, it has really good results.” While specific projections in regard to their expansion in the workplace are tenuous, some, like Horn, believe flexible work arrangements will soon be engrained in the U.S. business culture. “In the not-so-distant future, … the terms ‘workplace flexibility,’ or ‘flexible work arrangements,’ will no longer exist,” she says. “[At SHRM], we feel pretty strongly that this is just the way work is going to get done in the future — because of the diversity of the American workforce and the fact that we are a global economy, that work is 24/7. “Companies that embrace flexible work arrangements now are setting themselves up for success, and in many ways, those that don’t are not only putting themselves at a competitive disadvantage, but they may ultimately no longer be in existence in the not-so-distant future.”● “CULTURAL COMPETENCE...” Welcoming Community Diversity Regard Respect Inclusion Sensitivity Awareness Oakton Community College employs individuals who respect, are eager to learn about, and have a willingness to accept the many ways of viewing the world. Oakton serves the near northern suburbs of Chicago with campuses in Des Plaines and Skokie. Individuals with a commitment to working in a culturally competent environment and who reflect the increasing diversity of Oakton’s student body and community are sought to fill the following faculty openings: • Anthropology and Sociology (dual appointment) • Biology • Computer Information Systems • Computer Information Systems and Computer Networking and Systems (dual appointment) • Mathematics To learn more about these positions, full consideration deadlines, and to complete an online application, visit our Web site at: Listening www.oakton.edu Click on “employment” Experiences Alexandra Vollman is the editor of INSIGHT Into Diversity. Oakton Community College is an equal opportunity employer. insightintodiversity.com 63 Spring Semester Career Guide Who Is an Online “Applicant”? How to minimize EEOC and OFCCP liability By Jennifer Seda, JD W hen you are an employer, knowing who is defined as an “applicant” matters. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) focus on systemic hiring discrimination and obtain large monetary settlements every year. Within the U.S. Department of Labor, the EEOC investigates charges of discrimination brought against employers, and the OFCCP conducts roughly 4,000 audits of federal contractors and subcontractors every year. And here’s a well-kept secret: The agencies do not have to prove the employer intentionally discriminated; rather, under the disparate impact theory, they must demonstrate that the employer’s hiring process negatively • Candidates who submit an expression of interest • Candidates who meet the basic qualifications • Candidates who are considered (their substantive qualifications reviewed) • Candidates who do not expressly (or who the employer may infer) remove themselves from consideration Similarly, for employers who are not federal contractors or subcontractors, to fall within the definition of “applicant” in the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures, candidates must submit an expression significant increases in their candidate pools. But they should also be thinking about how these large numbers may affect potential liability in EEOC investigations and OFCCP audits. (In systemic discrimination investigations, the agency often asks for three to five years of applicant data; for the OFCCP, the agency starts with one year and may expand to two years if it sees statistical indicators.) In statistical analyses, big numbers are bad numbers. The more applicants in the analysis, the more likely the employer is to tip over into statistical significance; a standard deviation greater than 1.96 is considered statistically significant. In the example below, the original data contained all expressions of interest (everyone who applied) for a total of 10,000 candidates for one Analysis Rate for Females (Hires/Applicants) Rate for Males (Hires/Applicants) Standard Deviation Original Data 50/5000 .01 100/5000 .02 4.113 Minus Not Considered 50/3000 .02 100/4000 .03 2.383 Minus Not Considered & Withdrew 50/2000 .03 100/3500 .03 0.782 affected a group at a statistically significant level. So, identifying and strategically presenting who is an “applicant” — who should count against the employer in these statistical analyses.— is critical in EEOC investigations and OFCCP audits. So, just who is an applicant? The Internet Applicant Rule is the single greatest idea ever contrived by 64 the Department of Labor. It defines the type of applicants federal contractors and subcontractors must include in these analyses — and therefore who can be removed — as follows: January/February 2016 of interest, be considered, and not remove themselves from consideration. Big Numbers Are Bad Numbers Many employers allow candidates to apply online, and for some employers, that is the primary or only way candidates can apply. With this technology, employers are seeing position. Often, employers remove candidates who were not considered and who withdrew — and, in the case of federal contractors, candidates who did not meet the basic qualifications; this allows them to present their applicant data in a better light. It is this decrease in applicant numbers in the above example that brought the employer below statistical significance. How to Decrease Large Applicant Numbers Develop Strategic Disposition Codes under the Internet Applicant Rule To take advantage of the rule, employers should develop strategic disposition codes that mirror elements of the rule to identify who does not meet the definition of “applicant” and can be removed. For example, if the candidate does not return calls, takes another job, or wants too much money, the candidate is not considered an applicant because he or she is not willing to do the job, and the employer can infer that the candidate will remove himself or herself from consideration. Similarly, if the employer does not review the candidate’s • Do not move between requisitions. Similarly, moving candidates between requisitions suggests that the employer considers candidates for more than one position and allows the agencies to count them multiple times. Instead of moving them, consider inviting them to apply for another suitable requisition. • Use data management techniques (DMTs). DMTs allow employers to consider some of the candidates, and those not reviewed do not count against the employer. This technique is especially helpful for entry-level, high-volume positions. To use this technique, look at the candidates in batches, such as 10 or 20 at a time, Identifying and strategically presenting who is an “applicant” — who should count against the employer in these statistical analyses — is critical in EEOC investigations and OFCCP audits. substantive qualifications because the job was filled and the candidate applied too late, the individual is not an applicant under the rule because the employer did not consider him or her. Implement Best Practices To minimize the number of applicants, employers should consider implementing the following best practices: • Close requisitions when filled. Closing requisitions when filled will reduce the number of candidates applying. • Make one hire per requisition. One hire per requisition also makes the data cleaner to defend since all candidates in the requisition were considered for that specific position. “Evergreen,” or “continuous,” requisitions, on the other hand, are difficult to defend because it is not clear who was considered for each position. When this happens, the agencies can count the candidate multiple times, which leads to larger numbers. by a qualification-neutral means, such as timing — first received or most recently received. Once you have enough successful candidates to move on to the next phase, stop reviewing. Once the position is filled, disposition the remaining candidates who were not reviewed as “Never Considered – Data Management Technique.” Using these suggested best practices and the Internet Applicant Rule can help employers reduce their applicant pools, thus minimizing EEOC and OFCCP liability.● Jennifer Seda, JD, is a principal in the Denver, Co., office of Jackson Lewis P.C. She oversees the preparation of many of affirmative action plans each year. Over the past several years, she has defended multiple OFCCP audits, including on-site and corporate management (“glass ceiling”) reviews. For questions, contact Jennifer at [email protected]. The Department of Nursing and Allied Health Professions at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) invites applications for two full time, tenure-track positions beginning in August 2016 and a pool of temporary applicants. To view the full description and apply for these positions, please visit www.iup.edu/employment. All offers of employment are subject to and contingent upon confirmation of work eligibility and satisfactory completion of all pre-employment background checks. IUP is an equal opportunity employer M/F/H/V and is a proud member of the State System of Higher Education. Department of Nursing Tenure Track teaching Position Augustana University in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, has an exciting faculty opportunity for a tenure-track Assistant or Associate Professor in Nursing. A doctoral degree is required and a PhD in nursing or a DNP in a clinical specialty. If the doctoral degree is in a related field, the applicant must have a graduate degree in a nursing clinical specialty. Expertise in adult/gero and/or child health desired. Expertise in genetics and genomics a plus. About Sioux Falls: Ranked by Forbes as the No. 1 “Best Small Place for Business and Careers,” the city continues to be a vibrant, growing and diverse regional center for education, healthcare, financial services, biofuels, recreation and the arts. The metro area boasts a population of more than 238,000. Learn more & apply: www.augie.edu/jobs Augustana University is an Equal Opportunity Employer/Affirmative Action/Title IX Employer. Women and Minorities are encouraged to apply. Applicants must comply with the Immigration Reform and Control Act and may be required to submit official transcripts upon employment. insightintodiversity.com 65 Closing INSIGHT nursing & medicine quotes “To do what nobody else will do, a way that nobody else can do, in spite of all we go through, is to be a nurse.” — Rawsi Williams “Nurses are there when the last breath is taken, and nurses are there when the first breath is taken. Although it is more enjoyable to celebrate the birth, it is just as important to comfort in death.” — Christine Bell “Bound by paperwork, [and] short on hands, sleep, and energy … nurses are rarely short on caring.” — Sharon Hudacek “Nursing is an art — and if it is to be made an art, it requires an exclusive devotion as hard a preparation as any painter’s or sculptor’s work; for what is the having to do with dead canvas or dead marble, compared with having to do with the living body, the temple of God’s spirit? It is one of the Fine Arts: I had almost said, the finest of Fine Arts.” — Florence Nightingale “As a nurse, we have the opportunity to heal the heart, mind, soul, and body of our patients, their families, and ourselves. They may not remember your name, but they will never forget the way you made them feel.” — Maya Angelou “The glory of medicine is that it is constantly moving forward, that there is always more to learn. The ills of today do not cloud the horizon of tomorrow, but act as a spur to greater effort.” — William James Mayo “Wherever the art of medicine is loved, there is also a love of humanity.” — Hippocrates AND Present the First-Ever National Healthcare Diversity Virtual RECRUITMENT FAIR for Students and Alumni Save the date: April 20, 2016 To participate as a recruiter, contact Lenore Pearlstein at [email protected]. VALUES OF THE SCHOOL • • • • Contemplation in Action Cura Personalis Diversity Excellence • Respect • Social Justice • Value of the Common Good BACHELOR OF SCIENCE PROGRAMS Health Care Management & Policy healthsystems.georgetown.edu Human Science humanscience.georgetown.edu International Health internationalhealth.georgetown.edu Nursing nursing.georgetown.edu MASTER OF SCIENCE PROGRAMS Global Health * globalhealthms.georgetown.edu Health Systems Administration Online Executive and Full-Time On-Campus Options healthsystems.georgetown.edu Nursing On-Campus and Online Options nursing.georgetown.edu * The MS in Global Health Program is housed in the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences and administered by the Department of International Health. DOCTORAL PROGRAM Doctor of Nursing Practice nursing.georgetown.edu EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Learn more by visiting http://nhs.georgetown.edu/about/jobs. CALL (202) 687-2781 OR VISIT nhs.georgetown.edu