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Artificial Patients. Authentic Experience.

Nurses in ambulance with simulated patient

Absorbing the second-floor visuals of St. Elizabeth School of Nursing’s Simulation Lab (SIM Lab), a typical assortment of equipment catches one’s eye: crash carts, blood pressure cuffs, oxygen tanks and tubing. Then there’s Maggie: a high-fidelity manikin that simulates the birthing process. Maggie may experience postpartum hemorrhage, demand comfort and reassurance as the life of her newborn hangs in the balance, or her delivery may conclude in the perfect picture of technological bliss. Just a small sampling of scenarios students encounter in the most life-like setting possible as they prepare to become nurses.

If These Walls Could Talk

Old St. Elizabeth School of Nursing building

It only takes a roof and four exterior walls to construct a building, but many structures are much more significant than the materials they are made from. For St. Elizabeth School of Nursing, what once was just a structure to call home became a historic building that aided in developing a lineage of extraordinary nurses. From its construction to its demolition, the beloved building served as a place of companionship, passion and a legacy of nurses who came before.

What New Nurses Need to Know

Nurses talking in atrium

You remember it well, don’t you? Those fresh-faced days after graduating from nursing school. Butterflies were ever present as well as the optimism of beginning your nursing career of caring for others. It’s quite an adjustment to evolve from student to licensed nurse. We asked some faculty and alumni to share their personal words of wisdom to new nurses concerning what to expect in the workplace.