Graduate Catalog

Post-B.S.N. Nursing Informatics Certificate

Certificate Overview

Nursing Banner Grad Cert

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The Nursing Informatics Post-B.S.N. Certificate includes three theory courses for 9 credits. The student may take an optional Practicum course in which the student will select a healthcare setting and preceptor for the Practicum.

 

Credit Distribution

The Post-BSN Certificate in Nursing Informatics requires:

NUR-5310Nursing Informatics: Concepts and Issues

3

NUR-7010Nursing Informatics: Databases and Knowledge Management

3

NUR-7110Nursing Informatics: Consumer Informatics and Communications Technologies

3

Optional Practicum Course

NUR-7510Advanced Practice Practicum Course

3

Total Credit Hours: 9

NOTE: 

If NUR-5310: Nursing Informatics Concepts and Issues is completed as part of the degree requirements for the BSN or MSN at Thomas Edison State University, this course will not be required for certificate completion.  Completion of 100 on-ground, supervised hours are required for the practicum course. Application for practicum placement is submitted six months in advance.

Program Competencies

Upon completion of the Nursing Informatics Certificate the graduate will be able to meet the following competencies:

AACN The Essentials: Core Competencies for Professional Nursing Education (2021)

Nursing Informatics Certificate

Domain 1: Knowledge for Nursing Practice Descriptor: Integration, translation, and application of established and evolving disciplinary nursing knowledge and ways of knowing, as well as knowledge from other disciplines, including a foundation in liberal arts and natural and social sciences. This distinguishes the practice of professional nursing and forms the basis for clinical judgment and innovation in nursing practice.

Utilize interprofessional knowledge in nursing informatics to care for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities to enact clinical judgment and innovation in nursing practice.

Domain 2: Person-Centered Care Descriptor: Person-centered care focuses on the individual within multiple complicated contexts, including family and/or important others. Person-centered care is holistic, individualized, just, respectful, compassionate, coordinated, evidence-based, and developmentally appropriate. Person-centered care builds on a scientific body of knowledge that guides nursing practice regardless of specialty or functional area.

Demonstrate person-centered nursing informatics for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities to promote positive informatics utilization.

Domain 3: Population Health Descriptor: Population health spans the healthcare delivery continuum from public health prevention to disease management of populations and describes collaborative activities with both traditional and non-traditional partnerships from affected communities, public health, industry, academia, health care, local government entities, and others for the improvement of equitable population health outcomes.

Construct collaborative innovative nursing informatics for diverse communities for health promotion and disease management to improve population outcomes.

Domain 4: Scholarship for the Nursing Discipline Descriptor: The generation, synthesis, translation, application, and dissemination of nursing knowledge to improve health and transform health care.

Appraise evidence-based nursing informatics for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities to improve and transform health care.

Domain 5: Quality and Safety Descriptor: Employment of established and emerging principles of safety and improvement science. Quality and safety, as core values of nursing practice, enhance quality and minimize risk of harm to patients and providers through both system effectiveness and individual performance.

Employ nursing informatics for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities that promotes quality and safety.

Domain 6: Interprofessional Partnerships Descriptor: Intentional collaboration across professions and with care team members, patients, families, communities, and other stakeholders to optimize care, enhance the healthcare experience, and strengthen outcomes.

Collaborate with interprofessional team members and stakeholders in the provision of nursing informatics for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities to optimize outcomes.

Domain 7: Systems-Based Practice Descriptor: Responding to and leading within complex systems of health care. Nurses effectively and proactively coordinate resources to provide safe, quality, and equitable care for diverse populations

Lead in the provision of nursing informatics for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities to provide positive learning outcomes.

Domain 8: Informatics and Healthcare Technologies Descriptor: Information and communication technologies and informatics processes are used to provide care, gather data, form information to drive decision making, and support professionals as they expand knowledge and wisdom for practice. Informatics processes and technologies are used to manage and improve the delivery of safe, high-quality, and efficient healthcare services in accordance with best practice and professional and regulatory standards.

Use informatics and healthcare technologies in accordance with best practices that demonstrate professional, regulatory, and ethical standards for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities to provide positive learning outcomes.

Domain 9: Professionalism Descriptor: Formation and cultivation of a sustainable professional identity, including accountability, perspective, collaborative disposition, and comportment, that reflects nursing’s characteristics and values.

Integrate professionalism in nursing informatics for diverse nurses, individuals, families, and communities.

Domain 10: Personal, Professional, and Leadership Development Descriptor: Participation in activities and self-reflection that foster personal health, resilience, and well-being; contribute to lifelong learning; and support the acquisition of nursing expertise and the assertion of leadership.

Choose personal and professional developmental informatics activities that foster well-being and contribute to a culture of lifelong learning and leadership.