UMass Boston

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Dedicated Education Units (DEUs)

Dedicated Education Units (DEUs)

One of the many benefits available to the Manning College of Nursing and Health Sciences students is the opportunity to participate in our Dedicated Education Units program, a nationally-recognized innovator in clinical education for undergraduate nursing students.

The DEU Program and the MCNHS

Dedicated Education Units (DEU) were implemented in January 2008 between the Manning College of Nursing and Health Science's Undergraduate Nursing Program and two agency partners, Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), after two years of planning, and learning about DEUs from the University of Portland in Oregon and Flinders University, Australia.

Program Goals

This clinical education partnership fosters a collaborative relationship, allowing nursing education to inform nursing practice and patient care delivery. In turn, nursing practice informs nursing education, enhancing professional practice, and nursing education in an ever-changing health care environment.

This academic–service partnership supports the college's vision: to improve the health of diverse urban populations through the integration of teaching, targeted research, service, practice, and health policy in partnership with others.

Program Benefits

Students participating in the partnership benefit from:

  • Clinical rotations with practicing nurses providing clinical expertise and instruction
  • Clinical instruction by the same staff nurses on the same units for their adult health or pediatric clinical experiences and senior preceptorships
  • Access to patient care assistant positions during nursing school
  • Access to potential positions as new professional nurses following graduation
  • Utilization of the college’s Center for Clinical Education and Research (CCER) for additional simulation experience during the senior preceptorship
  • Leadership opportunities in conducting and presenting quality improvement teaching projects and presentations on DEUs at our partnering hospitals

Program Statistics

In January 2008, we launched the DEU program with 18 students. In 2011, over 200 students participated in DEU experiences.

The DEU helps us graduate a significant number of racially and ethnically-diverse, baccalaureate-prepared nurses (approximately 40%) in Massachusetts by utilizing staff nurses as our clinical instructors.

Accomplishments/Implications

In 2009, CNHS received a $300,000 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Evaluating Innovations in Nursing Education (EIN) grant to conduct a two-year rigorous evaluation research study of the school’s use of the “Dedicated Education Unit” Model for providing clinical education to nursing students. The college’s study, Project PDQ: Partnering for DEU Development and Quality, examined retention, satisfaction, and productivity rates, teaching capacity, costs and benefits, and education outcomes.

The first students to graduate under the DEU model, who were hired by the institutions they served in as student nurses, reported decreased transition time to professional practice, thus producing more experienced nurses faster, and likely reducing institutional costs. At the same time, staff nurses on dedicated education units report returning to school to pursue graduate nursing education.

DEU Faculty and Administrators

The CNHS DEU Team in the DEU Partnership includes Kathleen Kafel, MSN, RN, Director of Undergraduate Clinical Education; JoAnn Mulready-Shick, EdD, RN, CNE, ANEF, Clinical Faculty Coordinator, Bedford VA; Martin Lantieri, BS, RN, Clinical Faculty Coordinator, Mass General; Phylicia Ball, Clinical Faculty Coordinator, South Shore Hospital; and NoraAnn Walsh, Clinical Faculty Coordinator, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.