Maryland Colleges Receive $11M to Improve Nursing Programs

Seventeen nursing schools in Maryland will receive a combined $11 million in grants to improve technology and draw faculty and students to combat the state’s nursing shortage, according to a report in the Baltimore Business Journal.

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According to the Maryland Hospital Association, the state’s nursing shortage is expected to reach 10,000 by 2016. This first round of grants is expected to add 300 graduating nurses and add 20 faculty positions across the state, according to the report.

The “Who Will Care?” campaign, which has raised $15.5 million to date to combat the shortage, hopes to add 1,500 new nursing students. The goal of the campaign is to raise $20 million through the private sector and an additional $40 million through state, local and federal funds, according to the report.

Read the Business Journal’s report about the $11 million in grants to Maryland nursing schools.

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