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BSN Program Framework Impact

BSN Program Framework

Four major concepts (nurse generalist, professional role development, critical thinking, and patient-centered care), aid the BSN traditional or RN-BSN student in becoming a nurse generalist.  The concepts are interwoven into program and course objectives, assignments, and program evaluation. 

Nurse Generalist

The RN functions as a leader, manager, and advocate when providing patient-centered care in an inter-professional collaborative environment through use of knowledge, skills, professional values, critical thinking, and professional development. 

Professional Role Development

The profession of nursing is rapidly changing in response to transformations within the complex healthcare delivery system. In order to prepare the nurse generalist for these new roles, the RN to BSN completion program provides the foundation for lifelong learning, scholarship, graduate education, and specialization within their chosen career path.

Critical Thinking

Nurses function in an environment where information and clinical situations change frequently. Critical thinking enables nurses to analyze and respond to different challenges through use of the nursing process, evidence-based practice, professional standards, information management systems, and ethical codes. 

Patient-Centered Care

Nursing focuses on the delivery of quality, safe, ethical, and evidenced-based patient-centered care with emphasis on prevention and population health.  Patients include individual patients, families, groups, communities, and populations. 

The interconnectedness of these concepts can be seen in our conceptual framework.

A Venn Diagram listing Professional Role Development, Critical Thinking, and Patient-Centered Care in the outer circle and Nurse Generalist in the middle circle.