How a satellite site is making nursing education more accessible in Labrador - Action News
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How a satellite site is making nursing education more accessible in Labrador

A remote education strategy at Memorial University's faculty of nursing is proving to be a big hit in the Big Land, as students can stay closer to home while they earn their nursing degree.

Happy Valley-Goose Bay is one of 3 remote sites for MUN's nursing program

How innovation is helping to make nursing education more accessible in Labrador

10 months ago
Duration 2:45
At satellite sites for MUN's Faculty of Nursing, students can stay closer to home while they earn a nursing degree. Labrador Campus in Happy Valley Goose Bay is one of three communities across N.L. to offer the program.

Students in Labrador now have the option to receive their nursing educationin the Big Land.

The faculty of nursingat Memorial University offers itsdegree program in nursing through a satellite site in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, allowing local students to pursue their profession while staying closer to home.

At the Labrador Campus, lectures are delivered on site and remotely, with nursing labs taking place in the community. Clinical courses offered in-person at a health-care facility in the region.

CBC Radio's The Signal had the opportunity to visit the state-of-the-art nursing skills lab at the Labrador Campuslast month.

Program co-ordinator Kathy Gillett and skills lab instructor Marie-Pierre Dor demonstrated how the manikins medical simulation tools, not to be confused with the fashion-oriented mannequins of storesallow students to get practical experience before they moveinto the field.

Manikins are realistic, anatomically correct and capable of simulating real-life medical scenarios.

"These manikins and this equipment allows the student to practise what they would do in real life and get hands-on practice before they go to clinicals,"saidDor.

Gillett said the lab is a good place to learn new skills without risking harm.

"It's a safe place to do it," Gillett said. "It's a safe place to make mistakes."

In 2022, the Newfoundland and Labrador government opened three satellite nursing sites across the province to increase the number of seats in MUN's nursing program by 25 per cent. The expansion aims to train and retain nurses in rural areas of the province.

The other satellite sites are in Gander and Grand Falls-Windsor.

LISTEN | CBC's The Signal from Labrador:
Today is the second of three shows from The Big Land. Adam Walsh and The Signal Crew talk all things Labrador Campus of Memorial University -- its creation history, ongoing research, students and the larger community.

Gillett wanted to be involved with the program when she first heard about it because it is good for her community.

"We have problems keeping nurses in rural areas, especially," she said.

"So we really believe that if we train our own, we will be able to maintain the numbers that we need to do the work in the hospitals."

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