Other Titles

The Doctor of Nursing Practice: Reflections on the Past and Visions for the Future [Symposium]

Abstract

The rapid expansion of DNP programs in the United States has resulted in great variability in curriculum and the final DNP project. However, the principles upon which the DNP was endorsed by the American Colleges of Nursing remain unchanged and include: (1) advanced competencies for increasingly complex clinical, faculty and leadership roles; (2) enhanced knowledge to improve nursing practice and patient outcomes; (3) advanced leadership skills; (4) parity with other health professionals; (5) increased faculty for clinical instruction; (6) improved image (AACN, 2004, p.7). As outlined by the DNP Essentials document, the objective of the DNP is not to conduct rigorous research (AACN, 2006). The DNP prepared nurse is a healthcare leader with expertise in translating research into practice to improve health care quality and patient outcomes (Melynk, 2013; Melynk, 2016).

Many DNP programs continue to require their DNP students to conduct research as their final scholarly project. This has resulted in increasing confusion among both academic institutions and health care systems. This issue is in part perpetuated by the fact that many nursing faculty are new to evidence-based practice (EBP), having never had formal education and skill development in EBP. Faculty cannot teach what they themselves do not know (Melynk, 2013). Improving DNP curricula will require that nursing colleges invest in EBP education for their faculty including EBP skill building workshops so the faculty is best positioned to mentor and advise DNP students (Melynk, 2013).

Administrators in the service setting must also have a clear understanding of the preparation of the DNP nurse so that they can align role responsibilities to the practice/service setting. This includes providing career advancement opportunities such as clinical ladders.

PhD prepared nurses and DNP prepared nurses have great opportunities to transform healthcare through collaborative efforts steeped in their combined expertise: the PhD as the generator of external evidence from rigorous research; and the DNP as the best generator of internal evidence from quality improvement, outcomes management, and evidence-based projects (Melynk, 2013; Melynk, 2016). This model of PhD-DNP collaboration offers tremendous opportunities for nursing science as we move forward in closing the gap of moving research from the academic sphere into the practice setting.

Notes

One combined slide deck was submitted for all presentations in the symposium. This slide deck will be attached to other records in the repository. Please look for this session within the combined presentation. To locate all records utilizing this slide deck, search by Alternative Title.

Author Details

Bernadette Mazurek Melnyk, PhD, RN, CPNP/PMHNP, FAANP, FNAP, FAAN

Sigma Membership

Epsilon

Type

Presentation

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Clinical Outcomes, Doctor of Nursing Practice, Evidence-Based Practice

Conference Name

28th International Nursing Research Congress

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Dublin, Ireland

Conference Year

2017

Rights Holder

All rights reserved by the author(s) and/or publisher(s) listed in this item record unless relinquished in whole or part by a rights notation or a Creative Commons License present in this item record.

All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.

All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.

Acquisition

Proxy-submission

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The Doctor of Nursing Practice: Reflections on the Past and Visions for the Future

Dublin, Ireland

The rapid expansion of DNP programs in the United States has resulted in great variability in curriculum and the final DNP project. However, the principles upon which the DNP was endorsed by the American Colleges of Nursing remain unchanged and include: (1) advanced competencies for increasingly complex clinical, faculty and leadership roles; (2) enhanced knowledge to improve nursing practice and patient outcomes; (3) advanced leadership skills; (4) parity with other health professionals; (5) increased faculty for clinical instruction; (6) improved image (AACN, 2004, p.7). As outlined by the DNP Essentials document, the objective of the DNP is not to conduct rigorous research (AACN, 2006). The DNP prepared nurse is a healthcare leader with expertise in translating research into practice to improve health care quality and patient outcomes (Melynk, 2013; Melynk, 2016).

Many DNP programs continue to require their DNP students to conduct research as their final scholarly project. This has resulted in increasing confusion among both academic institutions and health care systems. This issue is in part perpetuated by the fact that many nursing faculty are new to evidence-based practice (EBP), having never had formal education and skill development in EBP. Faculty cannot teach what they themselves do not know (Melynk, 2013). Improving DNP curricula will require that nursing colleges invest in EBP education for their faculty including EBP skill building workshops so the faculty is best positioned to mentor and advise DNP students (Melynk, 2013).

Administrators in the service setting must also have a clear understanding of the preparation of the DNP nurse so that they can align role responsibilities to the practice/service setting. This includes providing career advancement opportunities such as clinical ladders.

PhD prepared nurses and DNP prepared nurses have great opportunities to transform healthcare through collaborative efforts steeped in their combined expertise: the PhD as the generator of external evidence from rigorous research; and the DNP as the best generator of internal evidence from quality improvement, outcomes management, and evidence-based projects (Melynk, 2013; Melynk, 2016). This model of PhD-DNP collaboration offers tremendous opportunities for nursing science as we move forward in closing the gap of moving research from the academic sphere into the practice setting.