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Adventist University Of Health Sciences | College Recon
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Adventist University of Health Sciences (ADU), formerly Florida Hospital College of Health Sciences, is located in Orlando, Florida, United States. It is a Seventh-day Adventist institution specializing in healthcare education. The college is associated with Florida Hospital and Adventist Health System, which is operated by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It is a part of the Seventh-day Adventist education system, the world's second largest Christian school system. The physical facilities are located next to Florida Hospital's Orlando campus. The University offers over 20 undergraduate and graduate degrees from associate to doctorate level, including online and post-baccalaureate certificates.


Video Adventist University of Health Sciences



Accreditation

ADU is accredited as a Level V institution by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACSCOC) to award Certificates, Associate's, Baccalaureate's, Master's, and a Doctoral degree. The University is also accredited by the Accrediting Association of Seventh-day Adventist, Schools, Colleges, and Universities. Hospitals used by the college for clinical experiences are accredited by the Joint Commission.


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History

In 1913, Florida Hospital a Registered Nursing program was established by what is now Florida Hospital Medical Center (FHMC) and operated for 70 years as a three-year hospital-based nursing training program. Southern Missionary College (now Southern Adventist University) in Collegedale, Tennessee would send its "pre-nursing" students to Orlando for clinical experience. In 1983, a two-year Associate Degree in Nursing education program was begun at FHMC under the sponsorship of Southern College of Seventh-Day Adventists, now Southern Adventist University. In August 2012, it was renamed the Adventist University of Health Sciences.

In 1988, Tom Werner, then President of Florida Hospital, called and asked Dr. Robert Williams, then President of Kettering College of Medical Arts, and Dr. Don Sahly, President of SAU, to conduct a study to see whether Florida Hospital should start its own college. Their report concluded that it would be to the advantage of the Hospital to start its own college. The planned outcome would be to gather the programs the Hospital was presently doing in sponsorship with SAU and its hospital-based programs and bring them together into a two-year college institution.

In 1990, Werner approached Dr. David Greenlaw, a Chaplain at Florida Hospital at the time, and asked him to complete a feasibility study regarding opening a college. Using research he gathered with the help of outside consultants, Dr. Greenlaw recommended that Florida Hospital start their own college. Eventually, Dr. Greenlaw was asked to establish and direct the new institution, becoming ADU's Founder, CEO, and first President. Dr. Robert Williams joined Dr. Greenlaw and served as the College's first Academic Dean.

Florida Hospital College of Health Sciences, 1992 - 2012

The school opened on August 24, 1992 under the name Florida Hospital College of Health Sciences (FHCHS) with 26 faculty members, full- and part-time, and 243 students on the first day of registration. Formal radiographic education began on the FHMC campus in 1962 and was transferred to FHCHS in 1992 with the school's opening with the approval of the Committee on Allied Health Education and Accreditation of the American Medical Association, and is accredited today by its successor, the Joint Review Committee on Education in Radiological Technology. The diagnostic medical sonography program, which was established by FHMC in 1988, is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs.

The Nursing program from Florida Hospital's campus was moved to the new College, where it received accreditation from SACSCOC as well as recognition by the National League for Nursing. These programs were augmented by programs in radiation therapy to form the College's first four curriculum offerings, which were associate-level degrees in Nursing, Radiation Therapy, Sonography, and Radiography.

In 1998, SACSCOC granted the school level II accreditation and ADU headed into its second major era as a baccalaureate degree granting institution. During that same year the College added an Occupational Therapy Assistant (OTA) A.S. degree followed by the school's first bachelor's program, a B.S. degree in Nursing. ADU later added two more associate degrees, one in Pre-Professional studies (2000) and the other in Nuclear Medicine (2002).

In 2008 the school received level III accreditation by SACSCOC to offer master's degrees. Nurse Anesthesia was introduced as the University's first graduate program. The program is accredited by the Council on Accreditation of Nurse Anesthesia Educational Programs (COA).

In 2011, ADU introduced its second graduate degree, a Master of Occupational Therapy (M.O.T.). ADU's OT programs are accredited by the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA).

In 2011, a new Generic Bachelor's in Nursing degree was introduced and the A.S. Nursing program was phased out. The following year the A.S degree in Nuclear Medicine also transitioned to a B.S. after ADU had been selected by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) to serve as a pilot program in 2010. In November 2013, the program received the maximum 7-year accreditation from the Joint Review Committee on Educational Programs in Nuclear Medicine Technology (JRCNMT).

Addition of ADU Online

In 2001, ADU received accreditation to offer distance degrees from SACSCOC. The first program offered in an entirely off-campus modality was a Radiography B.S. Completion degree.

A B.S. Completion degree in Nursing was added to the online line-up followed by a third B.S. Completion program in Diagnostic Medical Sonography in 2007. In 2015, ADU Online introduced an Executive Master of Healthcare Administration (E.M.H.A.).

ADU Denver

Around 2008, an opportunity arose in Denver, Colorado. Adventist Health System had four hospitals in the Denver area where they had been struggling to find qualified, mission-oriented healthcare providers. When the leaders of these institutions became aware of FHCHS and its ability to deliver distance education, they invited College administrators to offer classes in Denver. That initial inquiry led the College to live-interactive video broadcast education. By 2009, equipment was purchased and installed on campus in Orlando and at a site offered by Porter Adventist Hospital in Denver.

With the approval of the Colorado Board of Education to offer degrees, the first students began nursing classes at the Denver site by the end of that year. In 2011, a Radiography degree was added to the Denver programs and Sonography courses were offered the next year.

Name change

ADU's name was changed to the Adventist University of Health Sciences in August 2012. The new Adventist name reflects both the faith-based origins within the Seventh-day Adventist higher education mission and the institution's connection to AHS, is not limited to the Central Florida region, and serves as a more meaningful name for the Denver community.

Adventist University of Health Sciences, 2012 - present

ADU continued to add new graduate degrees to its offerings with a master's degree in Healthcare Administration in 2013 and a master's degree in Physician Assistant Studies in 2015. That same year a B.S. in Conductive Education program was added, making ADU the first healthcare University in the U.S. to offer one, followed by a B.S. in Healthcare Administration

In March 2015, President Dr. Greenlaw introduced Edwin I. Hernández, Ph.D. as the new Provost. ADU launched an Advanced Medical Assistant associate's degree program in 2016. On July 31, 2017, Dr. Greenlaw retired as President and the University's Provost, Dr. Hernández, was appointed by the Board of Trustees to serve as the school's next President. He began his new role on August 1st, 2017.


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Academics

ADU is organized into eight departments:

  • Physician Assistant (M.S.)
  • Physical Therapy (D.P.T.)
  • Occupational Therapy
    • Master of Occupational Therapy (M.O.T.)
    • Occupational Therapy Assistant (A.S.)
    • Conductive Education (B.S.)
    • Conductive Education (Post-baccalaureate certificate)
  • Nursing (B.S.N., RN-B.S.N. Completion option)
  • Nurse Anesthesia (M.S.)
  • Healthcare Administration (M.H.A., E.M.H.A., B.S., M.H.A-SI)
    • Master of Healthcare Administration in Strategy & Innovation (M.H.A.-SI) has two tracks:
      • Traditional M.H.A.
      • A.S. to M.H.A.
  • Health and Biomedical Sciences
    • Pre-Professional Studes (A.S.)
    • Health Science, Science (B.S.)
    • Health Science, Allied Health (B.S.)
    • Biomedical Sciences (B.S.)
  • Imaging Sciences
    • Diagnostic Medical Sonography (B.S., B.S. Completion option)
    • Radiography (A.S., B.S. Completion option)
    • Radiologic Sciences (B.S.)
    • Nuclear Medicine Technology (B.S.)
    • Advanced Imaging Certificate in Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) - (Online)
    • Advanced Imaging Certificate in Computed Tomography (CT) - (Online)
    • Advanced Imaging Certificate in Vascular Interventional (VI) Radiography (Online)

Distance Learning

ADU offers online B.S. degrees in Radiologic Sciences, Diagnostic Medical Sonography, Nursing, and graduate degrees in Health Administration. Additionally, ADU's continuing education division, Echelon, provides high-quality online continuing education to hospitals and corporate partners across the United States.

Partnership with Stetson University

In November of 2016, ADU signed a partnership agreement with Stetson University.


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Campus

Campus Center Building

In 2006, the 64,000 square-foot Campus Center building opened, adding many classrooms, labs, offices for academic departments and administration, an expanded bookstore, the NESS Café, and the Student Success Center. The new building also houses the Chapel, just off the main entrance of the Center, that celebrates ADU's Christian mission.

ADU's Welcome Center, which is where visitors check in, is located in the Campus Center lobby as well as the Registrar's office and the entrance to the campus bookstore and NESS Cafe.

Nursing Building

The Nursing building was completed in 1996 to house the Nursing programs and skills labs, classrooms, computer labs, the Learning Resources Center, a 90-seat amphitheater, and offices.

General Education Building

The General Education building, which served the Florida Hospital community for many years as a church and religions education center, has been completely renovated to serve as the location for the R.A. Williams Library, the Writing Center, administrative offices, science labs, a classroom, and Pre-Professional/Education offices.

Graduate Building

In 2012, ADU broke ground on the planned 60,000 square-foot Graduate Building and was officially dedicated at a ribbon cutting ceremony on September 3, 2014. The Graduate Building houses all current and proposed graduate programs. It also contains a 350-seat auditorium, the Dr. Greenlaw Conference Center, and the Simulation Center labs.

Garden of Miracles

On the same day the Graduate Building was dedicated, ADU also introduced its Garden of Miracles. The Seven paths leading to seven panels of glass that tower fourteen feet above the ground. Each panel features a stylized depiction of one of the miracles performed by Jesus. The selected miracles represent paths to wholeness, usefulness, hope, peace, faith, restoration, and life.

Maurizio Maso was the lead architect on the project and Maurice Casa the artist. Design, construction and installation for the Garden were generously donated by HuntonBrady Architects, Brasfield & Gorrie, BBM Structural Engineers, Bellommo-Herbert, A GAI company, Poulos & Bennett, and TLF Engineering for Architecture.

Andersen House

In 1995, a home on the campus was remodeled to provide offices for Student Services personnel, a game room and student lounge. Today, this house is known as Anderson House and is the base for the Office of Mission and Campus Ministries' activities.

Library

The library collection consists of reserve, reference, general education, health sciences, and historical collections. E-books represent 66% of the library's book collection of over 34,000 titles. The professional journals are 99% electronic and total over 31,000 titles. Streaming videos represent 98% of the library's video collection that exceeds 40,000 titles. All library electronic resources are available with remote access 24/7.

April 2015, the library launched JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments, the world's first peer-reviewed scientific video journal devoted to publishing scientific research in a visual format. UpToDate, the nation's premier clinical decision online support tool, was added to the library collection with the launch of ADU's physician assistant program in May 2015.

Since the spring of 2016, a section of library wall space is used as a display area for ADU students and employees to showcase their artistic creations. This display area glows with vibrant colors, inspiration, and hope.

The library offers several databases, including:

  • Access Anesthesiology: an online database compendium of more than 20 anesthesiology textbooks, 300 videos, practice guidelines, cases, and assessments tools.
  • JSTOR Arts/Sciences lll: is a digital library of academic journals, books, and primary sources to support the arts, religion, and sciences.
  • Amirsys Anatomy Reference Center: contains nearly 15,000 anatomical structures, topics, and views with thousands of anatomic images for over 250 topics. These resources include: anatomical illustrations, cadaver photos, imaging anatomy, and histology meant to utilize clinical anatomy in determining the best surgical or procedural approach to a patient.
  • Amirsys Radiology Reference Center: features over 4,000 clinical diagnoses, and nearly 72,000 high-quality, proprietary images such as MRI, CT scans, ultrasounds, x-rays, and medical illustrations.
  • Elsevier Clinical Pharmacology: is a comprehensive compendium of drug information that provides clinically-relevant information on prescription drugs, OTC drugs, herbal and nutritional supplements, plus new and investigational drugs.
  • ProQuest Literature Online: is a fully searchable library of more than 350,000 works of English and American poetry, drama and prose, hundreds of full-text literature journals, and other key criticism and reference resources.

Center for Academic Achievement

The Center of Academic Achievement is committed to helping students strengthen their academic skills by offering proactive tutoring, testing, counselling, advising, and coaching.

Writing Center

The Center opened in 2012 as part of ADU's academic support system. In addition to assistance with writing assignments, the consultants in the Center have developed a new service to prepare students for reading comprehension and writing sections that appear in standardized tests. In 2017, the Center moved from its original spot in the Nursing Building to the 2nd floor of the Robert A Williams Library.

An art gallery featuring revolving exhibitions contributed by members of ADU's community of faculty, staff, and students was opened inside of the relocated Writing Center in September of 2017.

Chapel

The chapel is a quiet space for students, staff and faculty to reflect, pray, or be still.


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Research

To support research efforts, ADU through its Grants Management Committee, competitively awards Faculty Research Seed Grants in the Fall and Spring trimesters to qualified university faculty and faculty/student teams.

As of 2016, ADU has two centers of excellence on campus to facilitate student and faculty research.

Center for Advanced Ultrasound Education (CAUE)

The CPHR engages students and faculty in applying geographic information systems technologies to medical geography research, incorporating current projects already in progress at ADU. Students gain hands-on research experience while developing skills in spatial thinking, quantitative analysis, and problem solving. In 2016, faculty provided:

  • Continuing education to over 90 radiology sonographers
  • Point of care ultrasound education to 12 Florida Hospital residents and fellows
  • Graduate classes in ultrasound education to about 50 students
  • Presentations at national conferences and an international conference in Chile

Center for Population Health Research (CPHR)

The CAUE expands on-going initiatives to provide opportunities for education beyond what is captured in current sonography programs at ADU. The Center offers continuing education training for the ultrasound community in Central Florida, including emergency physician training and training for the Radiology Physician residency program at Florida Hospital. In addition, the center consolidates efforts of department faculty and their contributions to the ultrasound education community.


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Community Engagement and Humanitarianism

Since 1999, members of ADU have participated in yearly mission trips, and all students receiving an undergraduate degree must complete a service-learning graduation requirement. In 2008, a mandatory Service Learning course was introduced to facilitate this goal.

ADU's Office of Community Engagement works with community partners to set up service learning projects and volunteer opportunities for students as well as faculty and staff. There is also the annual Service Day where faculty and staff gather to volunteer at a local community organization. The first annual Service Day took place on August 26th, 2009 at the Primrose Center, a large facility in South Orlando serving the needs of the mentally and physically challenged of Orange County.

The Community Engagement department organizes and hosts annual Summer Science Camps with a local branch of the Boys & Girls Clubs of America. The week-long, day camp is designed to teach middle school aged children the benefits of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) education, health education, and health careers. The children participate in science workshops, field trips, and fitness and wellness workshops. In 2017, ADU brought kids participating in the camp to the Orlando Science Center for the day to enjoy interactive exhibits, live programming, and other educational activities.

Grace Fund

University and Florida Hospital employees started the Grace Fund to help students with unexpected emergencies. In 2013 it was reported that more than $325,000 had been donated to the fund over the last decade. According to the 2015 - 2016 Annual Report, 78 students received help from the fund during that time period.

Hope Clinic

In 2011, Adventist University of Health Sciences established the HOPE (Healing through Occupation, Purpose and Excellence) Clinic in Orlando. In 2016, the Community Health Impact Council (CHiC) of FL Hospital approved a grant for the clinic, enabling it to expand in size and impact. The newly improved Clinic is expected to open in 2019.

Community Health Transitional Care Internship

ADU partnered with Florida Hospital to develop the Community Health Transitional Care Internship.

University Colloquium Series

To contribute to the intellectual and spiritual discourse of the Orlando community, the University has hosted a yearly Colloquium series since 2013, inviting speakers, usually recently published authors, to the campus to lead discussions related to a chosen theme. Speakers have included [[When Breath Becomes Air|Lucy Kalanithi] and Daryl Davis. Past themes include:

  • Moral Courage, 2013 - 2014
  • Resiliency, 2014 - 2015
  • Integrity, 2015 - 2016
  • Faith and Loss, 2016 - 2017
  • Civility, 2017 - 2018

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People

Presidents

Florida Hospital College of Health Sciences (1992-2012)

  • David E. Greenlaw (1992-2012)

Adventist University of Health Sciences (2012 - Present)

  • David E. Greenlaw (2012-2017)
  • Edwin I. Hernández (2017 - present)

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See also

  • List of Seventh-day Adventist colleges and universities
  • List of Seventh-day Adventist hospitals

ADU Denver - Enroll Now! - YouTube
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References


Colleges and Universities - Adventist Colleges
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External links

  • Official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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