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College of Nursing

Grant Expands Nurse Practitioner Training in Newark

Immersion at IHS

Students in Seton Hall’s Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program participate in an in-person practicum covering motivational interviewing and integrated physical exams.

A $180,563 grant from the Healthcare Foundation of New Jersey will support a new partnership between Seton Hall University College of Nursing and a Newark-based community health organization to expand clinical training for students in the M.S.N. in Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) program and increase access to care for Newark residents.

The funding will establish a full-time nurse practitioner to serve as a dedicated preceptor for up to six psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner students each year. In addition to mentoring students, the clinician will maintain an annual caseload of at least 150 patients, helping address the behavioral health needs of people experiencing homelessness, individuals living with HIV/AIDS and those with substance use disorders.

The partnership centers on Seton Hall’s collaboration with the North Jersey Community Research Initiative (NJCRI), one of the region’s largest and most established community-based health organizations. Working within NJCRI’s Newark facilities, students will train alongside experienced clinicians who care for patients facing medical, psychological and socioeconomic challenges.

The initiative reflects Seton Hall’s emphasis on forming servant leaders prepared to meet community needs.

“This collaboration reflects Seton Hall’s mission to prepare practitioners who elevate the standard of care in underserved communities,” said Kristi Stinson, PhD, RN, APN, PNAP, interim dean of the College of Nursing.

The grant was awarded by the Healthcare Foundation of New Jersey, a philanthropic organization dedicated to improving the health and well-being of underserved, vulnerable populations in greater Newark and the Jewish community of Greater MetroWest New Jersey. Founded in 1996, the foundation supports initiatives that expand access to care, strengthen community-based healthcare programs, and advance medical education through strategic partnerships.

students at IHS campus

Seton Hall’s College of Nursing at the Interprofessional Health Sciences (IHS) campus in Nutley, New Jersey.

Seton Hall’s M.S.N. in PMHNP program is offered in an online, asynchronous format, allowing working nurses to balance coursework with professional responsibilities. The new preceptorship expands the required in-person clinical placement opportunities for students in the program.

Program Director Kate Tarpey-Balsamo, Ph.D., M.S.N., the grant’s principal investigator, emphasized the value of immersive clinical education. “Our students gain the most when they learn from expert clinicians serving diverse and complex populations,” she said. “This partnership ensures they enter the workforce with the advanced skills needed to meet rising mental health demands.”

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Resources and Services Administration, there are more than 6,200 designated mental health professional shortage areas in the United States, with over 6,400 additional practitioners needed to eliminate those shortages. Psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioners are among the professionals helping address workforce gaps, particularly in community and safety-net settings.

Categories: Health and Medicine