DNP Program Requirements
The Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program (Administration, Family Nurse Practitioner) is designed to build upon the MSN degree and is offered at the University of Houston main campus and online. The Doctor of Nursing Practice is an evidence-based-practice-focused program and students who complete this program will demonstrate practice in an advanced nursing practice specialty or advanced practice nursing role and complete scholarly work. Nurses who have a Doctor of Nursing Practice have completed the highest level of education in nursing practice.
As a terminal degree, the Doctor of Nursing Practice requires applicants to have knowledge of the following topics: Information Systems/Technology, Health Policy and Advocacy, Clinical Prevention and Population Health for Improving Health, and Graduate-level statistics. The Doctor of Nursing Practice will build upon this knowledge throughout the program.
While earning a PH.D. requires students to write a dissertation, the Doctor of Nursing Practice at UH will require students to create a portfolio of required scholarly components completed during the Doctor of Nursing Practice program that demonstrate a student’s achievement of the highest level of advanced practice registered nursing.
The portfolio is evidence of competency in all domains of DNP practice and achievement of the program outcomes. Each student is required to complete a DNP scholarly project prior to graduation, which will be included in the portfolio. Students will be required to present the scholarly project to the University community and defend the scholarly project to the DNP Chair and Committee.
Doctor of Nursing Practice students must also meet a minimum of 1000 post-baccalaureate clinical hours as delineated in the Essentials: Core Competencies for Professional Nursing Education (AACN, 2021) to satisfy the clinical practice hour requirement for successful completion of the Doctor of Nursing Practice program.
The required 1000 clinical/practice hours may include a combination of hours completed at the master’s level and those completed during the postmaster’s DNP program. Clinical hours may be composed of direct point of care clinical practice, systems/indirect nursing practice or related experiences. The maximum clinical hours accepted from an MSN program for all students is 500 hours.
DNP Program Goals
The objectives of the DNP program is to build upon the objectives of the MSN FNP and MSN Administration programs, including preparing the DNP graduate to:
- Translate knowledge using theories and concepts from the biological, social and behavioral
sciences, humanities, and nursing to ameliorate nursing practice.
- Critically analyze and integrate data from multiple contexts to develop, implement,
and evaluate culturally sensitive, person-centered care strategies that promote accountability
for holistic well-being.
- Leverage complex population health data to design, implement, and continuously refine
system-level interventions and collaborative models that drive equitable health outcomes
across the continuum of care.
- Lead, translate, and disseminate evidence-based scholarship. Drive transformative
nursing practices that reshape health care delivery and optimize health outcomes.
- Sustain quality improvement principles, safety standards, benchmarks, and system performances
to establish a culture of patient, provider, and work environment safety.
- Integrate effective and respectful communication, intentional engagement, collaboration,
and delegation with interprofessionals.
- Design, support, and disseminate policies that impact nursing practice, social drivers
of health, health outcomes, and advocates access to cost-effective quality care and
system-wide delivery.
- Design, implement, and evaluate information and communication technologies to gather
and document data, drive decision making, manage and improve the delivery of safe,
high-quality, and adept nursing care to populations in diverse settings.
- Model and advocate accountability to professional values, advocacy, ethical, moral,
and legal aspects of compassionate nursing care in healthcare systems and settings.
- Develop and lead activities that foster personal health, well-being, and lifelong learning, while demonstrating a growth mindset and capacity for leadership, mentorship, and nursing expertise.
To find out about how to apply and the requirements for the DNP Program, view the Admission Requirements or email nursing@uh.edu for general information.