Youth Program...


MAHEC High School Nurse Bridge Project

Thank you for your interest in the MAHEC "High School Nurse Bridge Project". The overall intent of the project is to address the educational gaps of students in the Greater East Los Angeles area by:

  • Preparing under represented minority high school students in math, science and verbal skills in order to enter schools of nursing with a solid foundation in these subjects and
  • Developing a pipeline program that will nurture success.

The Multicultural Area Health Education Center (MAHEC) has received funding to develop a plan of action which will detail three components whose elements will include high school enrichment and preparation, curricular input from the schools of nursing and personnel trends from health care industry representative (graphic attached)

As a member of the health care industry your input is crucial to this project. The product of this project will provide a plan that will enable students, provide meaningful curricular input to the high schools and supply the healthcare industry with a cadre of nurses that are educated to meet the changing needs of healthcare. Your advise on curriculum, the effect on industry trends on nursing and your ability to provide role models to high school students interested in nursing is a cornerstone of this project. We hope you are able to attend the next meeting of the High School Nursing Bridge Project.

MAHEC High School Nurse Bridge Project Background

This project addresses the need for under represented minorities in nursing by improving the academic preparation of high school students in math and science before they apply to the schools of nursing. The changing demographics in the State of California, and in particular the County and City of Los Angeles, require the response of public education, the health care industry and the nursing profession. The concomitant increased technologic demands of nursing education and the academic preparation in math and science result in a pool of students ill prepared for the rigors of nursing school.

Against a national state and local backdrop of rapid growth and racial ethnic diversification, nursing trends call for nurses to participate in the management of care as peers in interdisciplinary teams and to integrate clinical knowledge of the community in which they practice. The increased complexity of the scope of practice for the registered nurse requires a workforce that has the capacity to adapt to the changing medical and demographic environment in the United States. This is particularly evident in California where the ethnic minorities are nearing 50% and in Los Angeles where the majority of enrolled students in the public elementary and high schools are from underrepresented minority populations.

The broader scope of nursing and increased technological requirements have accelerated trends that will require advanced critical thinking, problem solving and data analysis. A sound foundation in a broad range of basic sciences; knowledge of behavorial, social and management sciences and an ability to communicate with an ever changing and multicultural patient base are vital to a strong preparatory base.

The trend is that the Baccalaureate education in nursing with its broader and more scientific curriculum best fulfils these requirements and provides a sound foundation for the increased rigor of the profession. A compounding issue is that the Health Resource Service Administration projects a registered nursing shortage over the next five years. California ranked last among the states in RNs per capita. The statistics document not only a nursing shortage but also a lack of response to changing demographics in the country, state and in the greater Los Angeles area.

In order to prepare a nursing workforce to meet the challenges of cultural diversity in the delivery of health care we must prepare under-represented minorities at the high school level before the need for redemption occurs in college. The MAHEC High School Nurse Project will address these gaps in education through high school interventions that will interface with high schools, schools of nursing and the health care industry.




Fostering Network for Public Health