Family Nurse Practitioner

Provide family-centered care

Our Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) track prepares you to address the health concerns of well, at-risk, and chronically ill individuals and their families. You will learn to provide direct care in collaboration with other healthcare professionals.

The FNP track embraces a unique narrative-centered learning environment that actively practices real-world problem solving. We believe the whole family is the identified unit of care, not simply the context for the care of one person.

When you graduate, you’ll find potential employment opportunities in:

  • Collaborative clinical practice
  • Nurse-managed clinics
  • School-based clinics
  • Occupational health
  • Federally qualified health centers in both urban and rural settings
  • Specialty practice community clinics
  • Group clinical practice/HMOs
  • Urgent/emergency room
  • Prisons

The BSN-DNP Family Nurse Practitioner track is a three-year, full-time program of study that includes 66 credit hours and 1035 clinical hours, 750 of which are direct patient care hours supervised by clinical faculty and an experienced preceptor. Clinical placements are arranged cooperatively by students and faculty. The remaining clinical hours are completed through the planning, implementation, and evaluation of a population health intervention for your evidence-based DNP project.

Certification

When you graduate, you will eligible for certification through the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) or the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) as a Family Nurse Practitioner. As an advanced practice nurse, you will also qualify to apply for prescriptive authority from the Indiana Licensure Board.