Planning For Aging
The UT Chattanooga School of Nursing became the first in Tennessee to be invited to join the National Hartford Center of Gerontological Nursing Excellence.
With the percentage of the population aged 65 and older in Southeast Tennessee expected to reach 68.5 percent by 2030, the UTC nursing program decided to prepare.
“As the population ages, it is important for nursing to remain at the forefront in educating nurses. Through our association with the Hartford Center, the UTC School of Nursing will have access to the best and the brightest that nursing has to offer as we look at programming and research for this specific population,” said Chris Smith, UTC school of nursing director. “I plan on getting older, so I look forward to what we learn, what the research tells us and adding to the best practices in nursing as it relates to gerontology. Our goal is to have a nationally recognized program in gerontological nursing.”
To meet the growing need for healthcare professionals specializing in gerontology, the UTC school of nursing hired Brittany Cusack as the Vicky B. Gregg Chair of Gerontology in the school of nursing. The endowed chair was created by a $1.5 million gift from the BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee Health Foundation to honor the distinguished career of the organization’s retired chief executive officer and UT Trustee Vicky Gregg.
Since joining the nursing faculty, Cusack led the efforts to start an adult gerontology acute care nurse practitioner program in the School of Nursing, and to create a gerontology concentration in the master of social work program as well as a bachelor’s degree and undergraduate minor in gerontology for the campus.
The Hartford Center strives to ensure a strong gerontological workforce in nursing in the United States and internationally through faculty development, advancing gerontological nursing science, facilitating the adoption of best practices, fostering leadership and designing and shaping policy.