Bachelor's degree may be required for Iowa nursing programs

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Dr. Susan White, nursing department chair, stands by while first-year nursing student Brittany Grandfield practices with a catheter kit on a dummy. (CNA photo by BAILEY POOLMAN)

The requirement that all nurses will need a bachelor’s degree is still hot on the table.

In mid-November, the Iowa Board of Nursing met in closed session to discuss the proposal of requiring nurses in Iowa to earn a bachelor’s degree. Their next scheduled meeting is Dec. 13 in closed session, and a public hearing will be held sometime after that date.

According to a Des Moines Register story, health care groups “argue nurses increasingly coordinate care in homes and other settings outside (of) hospitals, a responsibility that requires more than two years of education.”

On the other hand, community colleges generally oppose the proposal.

“One of the concerns is that really for the individual entering nursing it could increase the expenses for them as they complete the associate degree program as one of our students,” said Dr. Barb Crittenden, president of Southwestern Community College (SWCC), “and they complete the program and they can get their RN license and begin to work. But then (to) be required to take that additional education in the first five years would create an expense for them.”

The mandate states that, starting Jan. 1, 2015, graduates of an associate’s degree program would have to:

•Enroll in a bachelor’s degree nursing program prior to their first license renewal, within two years of graduation.

•Complete a bachelor’s degree prior to the second license renewal, within three years of the first license renewal.

“Our associate degree nursing program has been a really strong program, it’s been a high demand program,” said Crittenden, “and actually, even under this proposal, if it goes through, and it’s in the early stages of it being considered, it still allows students to complete their associate’s degree, sit for the licensure exam, become an RN and begin working. So it really affects them in the first five years of their career.”

The only state to have ever required a bachelor’s degree was North Dakota in 1987, but the law was repealed in 2003 because of nurse shortages.

“We’re just concerned that some people at the beginning, if they thought they had to get a four-year degree, that it would be somewhat intimidating, and intimidating financially,” said Dr. Susan White, SWCC nursing department chairwoman.

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