
The nurses are clearly on to something. Four years after they
started the Kansas Primary Care Nurse Practitioner Program,
almost 250 nurse practitioners have graduated. Two-thirds of
them practice today in underserved rural areas. Most of the rest
work in low-income clinics in the inner city. Indeed, the Kansas
program has proved so successful that it is fast becoming a
model for delivering basic health care in rural areas across the
U.S.
Like an old-fashioned barn raising, it took the skills and hard
work of hundreds of people to turn this vision into reality.
Four different nursing schools pooled their resources to make
classes available to students all over Kansas via compressed
video, a medium that digitizes both visual images and sound,
then "compresses" the information for transmission over
high-speed telephone lines to specially configured television
sets. But if any two people can be said to represent the heart
and soul of the program, they are Helen Conners, 54, and Gemma
Doll, 48.
An associate dean at the University of Kansas School of Nursing
in Kansas City, Conners is that rarest of all professionals, a
bureaucrat who is also a successful innovator. She conceived the
idea for the long-distance educational program, drummed up the
seed money and shepherded the concept through countless meetings
and strategy sessions. "I've always enjoyed thinking about new
ways of doing things," Conners says. "Once we got started, the
whole thing just kind of snowballed."
When it comes to teaching medical techniques, of course, some of
the instruction has to be hands-on, and that is where people
like Doll come in. A longtime nurse practitioner from Garden
City, Doll also happens to be a Dominican sister who lives in a
modest home with two other members of her order. By day, Doll
works for two community-health clinics that care for about 1,300
children, most of them Mexican American, whose parents may work
but may not necessarily have insurance. In the evening she
teaches local nurse-practitioner students how to suture wounds,
treat joint injuries and interpret X rays, among other things.
"The call to nursing came first, followed by the spiritual
call," she says. "Ever since I was in the first or second grade,
I've wanted to reach out and help others."
What links these two women--and dramatically shrinks the
distance from Kansas City to Garden City--is one of the
shrewdest applications of telecommunications technology that can
be found anywhere in medicine today. In 1995 Kansas extended its
network of high-speed telephone lines to reach Garden City
specifically so that St. Catherine Hospital, a local 132-bed
facility owned by the Dominican Sisters, could set up a
compressed-video classroom and become part of the statewide
nurse-practitioner program. "It breaks the isolation," says
Doll, who sits in on her students' classes at the hospital. "It
keeps us abreast of all the latest things."
Other health-care experts have championed various kinds of
satellite broadcasts, which can cost $2,000 an hour, for
long-distance learning. But the Kansans' choice--compressed
video-- costs just $30 an hour. Its quality is almost as good as
satellite TV, enabling students and teachers to interact with
only a slight, almost imperceptible lag. And since transmission
occurs over telephone lines, the cost of adding on to the
network is relatively low.
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