Thursday, July 26, 2007

Success at the Board of Nursing Meeting This Morning

My presentation at the Wisconsin Board of Nursing meeting this morning went as well as I could have realistically expected. No decisions were made today, but the members of the Board listened to what I had to say and it seemed like they are interested helping to find a reasonable resolution to the problem with the RN licensure of Marquette University's Direct Entry nursing students.

Dr. Judith Miller, the Associate Dean for Graduate Programs at Marquette's College of Nursing, was not able to attend today's meeting. The Board would like to give her the opportunity to address the issue at a meeting, so the Board will be again addressing the licensure of Marquette's Direct Entry students at the next board meeting on August 30th.

I don't have time to give all the details about what happened at the meeting right now, but for now I will post the content of my presentation:
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– My name is Lydia Bertrand. I would like to thank the members of the Board for allowing me to make a personal appearance at this meeting today.

– Before I get started I would like to give everyone a copy of some materials relevant to my presentation. [Distribute handouts]

– I was a member of the 6th cohort of Marquette’s Direct Entry nursing program from 2004 to 2005, but left the program at the end of the 15-month pre-MSN portion because my family was forced to move to another state for my husband’s work. The state of Mississippi, where I am now living, has been unable to issue me a nursing license by endorsement even though I was granted a Wisconsin license. But even worse, having attended Marquette’s Direct Entry program has actually made it even more difficult for me to get a nursing license in Mississippi than it would have been if I had never taken a nursing class before. Because of this, my husband is currently supporting our family of three on only a few thousand dollars per year more than the amount of my outstanding student loans that I took in order to attend the Marquette University Direct Entry program.

– Back in 1999 the Wisconsin Board of Nursing made a terrible mistake. The Board OK’d a letter from Wayne Austin, then legal counsel for the Board of Nursing, to Madeline Wake, then Dean of Marquette’s College of Nursing. Both the DRL and Marquette seem to believe that this letter gives permission for students in Marquette University’s Direct Entry nursing program to sit for NCLEX and to become licensed as RN s at the end of the 15-month pre-MSN portion of the program even though students do not graduate from the program at that time.

– I call this arrangement between the Board of Nursing and Marquette University the "Special Agreement" because that is what the administrators at Marquette called it when I was a student in the Direct Entry program.

– There are two problems with this interpretation of the "Special Agreement." The first problem is that the letter from Wayne Austin does not say that Direct Entry students can sit for NCLEX and become licensed as RN s at the end of the pre-MSN part of the program without graduating.

– I have highlighted the pertinent section of the letter on page 5 of your handout. Wayne Austin says in the letter that: "it is our opinion that graduates of the program would qualify both to sit for NCLEX and for licensure to practice professional nursing." Nowhere in the letter is it indicated that students who have not graduated from the program are eligible for licensure in Wisconsin.

– The second problem with the "Special Agreement" is that even if Wayne Austin and the Board of Nursing had stated that Marquette’s Direct Entry students could become licensed as RN s at the end of the pre-MSN phase of the program without graduating, the agreement would be invalid because it is outside of their scope of authority to make such exceptions to Wisconsin State Law.

– The Wisconsin Nurse Practice Act 441.04 and the Wisconsin Administrative Code N 2.03 (1)(c) both require graduation from a nursing program - but Marquette’s Direct Entry students don’t graduate at the end of the pre-MSN portion of the program, so they do not meet the legal criteria for RN licensure in WI at that time.

– On page 2 of your handout I have printed out the relevant text of the Nurse Practice Act and the Wisconsin Administrative Code. The Wisconsin Nurse Practice Act 441.04 reads:
"Any person who has graduated from a high school or its equivalent as determined by the board, does not have an arrest or conviction record, subject to ss. 111.321, 111.322 and 111.335, holds a diploma of graduation from an accredited school of nursing and, if the school is located outside this state, submits evidence of general and professional educational qualifications comparable to those required in this state at the time of graduation may apply to the department for licensure by the board as a registered nurse, and upon payment of the fee specified under s. 440.05 (1) shall be entitled to examination."

– The Wisconsin Administrative Code N 2.03 (1) reads:
"An applicant is eligible for the examination for registered nurses if the applicant:
(a) Does not have an arrest or conviction record, subject to ss. 111.321, 111.322 and 111.335, Stats.;
(b) Has graduated from high school or its equivalent; and,
(c) Has graduated from a board-approved school of professional nursing."

–Both the Nurse Practice Act and the Administrative Code specifically list graduation as a requirement for taking the licensure exam. The only reasonable interpretation of the intent of these passages is that they actually require graduation.

– Since the Wisconsin Nurse Practice Act is clear about requiring graduation from a nursing program, it might seem surprising that The American Association of Colleges of Nursing lists 60 schools that offer graduate entry programs for people who hold non-nursing bachelor’s degrees similar to the one at Marquette. [it's on page 4 of the pdf file]

– I have not had time to research every one of these programs, but I randomly chose 12 programs from the list that are outside of Wisconsin to look into further. I found that very few of the programs are run the same way as Marquette’s Direct Entry program. Most of them do not have the same legal problem with the RN licensure of their students at the end of the pre-MSN phase for one of four reasons:

1) One of the programs I researched, the one at the University of South Alabama, confers a BSN degree at the end of the pre-MSN phase so that their students are legally eligible to sit for NCLEX and to become licensed as RN’s at that time.

2) Another program through the Medical College of Georgia, does not have its students sit for NCLEX or become RN s until they graduate from the program with an MSN degree, which makes them legally eligible for RN licensure at that time.

3) At three of the institutions I researched, San Francisco State University, The University of South Florida, and the University of Tampa, having an RN license is a prerequisite for entering the "graduate entry" program, so there is no need for the program to make its students legally eligible for RN licensure.

4) And lastly: four of the programs I looked at, the ones at Vanderbilt, Yale, the University of Southern Maine, and the University of Minnesota, are in states where their Nurse Practice Act does not require graduation from a school of nursing in order to become licensed as an RN. For this reason their students can become legally eligible to sit for NCLEX and to become licensed as RN s even though these programs do not confer a degree or diploma at the end of the pre-MSN phase.

– Marquette never led me to believe that I would be granted a BSN degree at the end of the pre-MSN portion of the Direct Entry program. They did lead me to believe that I would be legally eligible to sit for NCLEX and to become licensed as an RN in Wisconsin at the end of the pre-MSN portion of the program - and that was simply not true. The only way I became eligible to sit for NCLEX and became licensed as an RN in Wisconsin is because Marquette filed a fraudulent "259" or "Statement of Graduation" form with the DRL as a part of my licensure application that falsely indicated I had in fact been awarded a BSN. I have included a photocopy of this "Statement of Graduation" form on page 7 of your handout.

– I am not the only person who has been hurt by the "Special Agreement" between the Wisconsin Board of Nursing and Marquette University. There are other students who continued with the MSN portion of the program but did not graduate from it. These students - many of them experienced nurses - could be unable to obtain licensure in another state if they ever leave Wisconsin. Also, I know of a student who has been threatened with losing her job unless she goes back to school to get a BSN – even while working on her MSN.

– This is the bottom line: The Wisconsin Board of Nursing never gave permission for Marquette’s Direct Entry students to become licensed as RN s without graduating from a nursing program. The 1999 letter from Wayne Austin to Marquette states that graduates of the program would be eligible to sit for NCLEX and to become licensed as RNs.

– And even if they had given permission for Marquette’s Direct Entry students to become licensed at the end of the pre-MSN part of the program without holding a "diploma of graduation," the agreement would be invalid because the Board of Nursing does not hold the authority to make such an exception to a State Law.

– I traveled all the way from my home in Mississippi to be here today to ask the Board to fix the mistake that was made 8 years ago – by immediately dissolving the "Special Agreement" with the Marquette University Direct Entry nursing program, and any other similar programs in Wisconsin.

– I believe that the Board has no alternative but to immediately stop issuing nursing licenses to individuals who do not hold a true "diploma of graduation" from a school of nursing, as is required by the Wisconsin Nurse Practice Act.

– Are there any questions for me?