Netherlanders stop off at White Plains
Hospital
Center hosts tour for NP students
visiting area hospitals
By BRYAN F. YURCAN

White Plains Hospital Center nurse practitioner Mirjam
Norris-Nommensen, center, leads a group of students from
the Netherlands on a tour of the medical facility.
Several students from one of the Netherlands’
first nurse practitioner (NP) programs toured White
Plains Hospital Center last week to get a glimpse
of how those in the profession function in the U.S.
health-care system.
The 14 students and two faculty members
of Zuyd University in Heerlen, the Netherlands,
were on a one-week tour of New York metro area hospitals
and medical colleges. The group was staying in Manhattan.
“They have very limited opportunities (in
the Netherlands) to learn more about how nurse practitioners
have been integrated into U.S. health care,” said
Mirjam Norris-Nommensen, an NP at White Plains Hospital.
Nommensen, who is Dutch, earned a bachelor’s
degree in nursing from Zuyd University. She studied
at Pace University as an exchange student in 1987
where she earned a master’s degree.
A NP generally has completed advanced education,
usually a master’s, and is trained in the diagnosis
and management of common medical conditions, including
chronic illnesses.
Nommensen said the NP profession is relatively
new in the Netherlands; the students touring the
hospital were part of the first graduating class
of NPs in the southern part of the country. In the
northern Netherlands, the first NP program began
in 1998.
In 2003, Nommensen attended a conference
at Zuyd that focused on starting an NP program.
She agreed to help develop it and began teaching
some of the courses online.
She then arranged the visit for the first
group of graduating students in the program to come
to the hospital and learn how NPs function in the
workplace.
“I hope it gives them a commitment to professional
development and a global perspective of the nurse
practitioner practice,” she said. “They are the
pioneers and they have the responsibility to further
the profession in The Netherlands.”
One of the students, Ron Sleegers, hoped
to learn from watching NPs at work firsthand.
“It’s very interesting,” he said. “We wanted
to see (the NPs’) relationships with the doctors
and (how) they worked.”
Dr. Gerrie JJW Bours, who traveled with
the students from the Netherlands and helped organize
the event with Nommensen, said that since the profession
is a relatively new one in that country, the students
could hopefully take back some of what they learned
and share it with others.
“We hope they have a critical reflection
on the expectation of the position,” she said.
Nommensen hopes the NP profession will
continue to grow in her native country.
“I hope they see some of the accomplishments
we made.”
Reader
Comments
|
Please
send us your comments!
|
|
Add
Your Comments