HIGHER EDUCATION University of Houston renames College of Nursing after receiving $20M gift
2023 HEALTH CARE EDITION
BY JOE EDWARDS
Health Services estimates the pro- jected shortage of registered nurses statewide will jump from 29,000 to over 57,000 by 2032, as reported in the release. The Gessner family said they hope this nancial gift can quickly and positively impact the labor shortage of nurses within the state. “The silver tsunami is coming,” Barbara Gessner said in the news release. “We are certainly going to need more nurses as the population gets older, so the medical profession will be put to the test. It’s always been an honorable profession, and we believe in that tender, compassionate care that nurses provide.” The $20 million gift will create three new openings for postgraduate professors and new hires that will support and promote innovative and progressive research within the nursing eld.
The University of Houston College of Nursing will be renamed the Andy and Barbara Gessner College of Nursing. This change comes after receiving a $20 million donation from the alumnus and his wife. The university made the announce- ment at a news conference May 8 on the college’s Sugar Land campus. UH oers programs in registered nursing and Bachelor of Science in nursing as well as second-degree BSN and Master of Science in nursing degree programs at both the main campus and Sugar Land campus. This gift will fund further nursing scholarships and fellowships while strengthening general education and research, and producing educated nurses to tackle the state’s workforce shortage, according to a May 8 news release from the university. The Texas Department of State
Andy (right) and Barbara Gessner (left) attended the naming event for the Andy and Barbara Gessner College of Nursing May 8. (Courtesy University of Houston)
Furthermore, two of these new postgraduate professor openings are tied to the university’s $100 Million Challenge, a fund established in August 2019 in which an anonymous donor will match state contributions and outside gifts for the university up to $100 million. Additional endowments aorded by the donation will help boost education and clinical learning, scholarships, graduate fellowships, adjunct faculty support, and general marketing resources, according to the release.
University ocials hope a new focus on marketing and scholarship opportunities will garner more nursing applicants while oering students better educational resources, the release stated. Along with this signicant dona- tion, university ocials hope to see a continued rise in nursing students, as mentioned in the news release. As of 2018, the university has seen a 141% increase in nursing students with over 375 students enrolled in the university’s collective system.
SUGAR LAND 3335 HWY 6 S (281) 313-4446 MISSOURI CITY 5418 HWY 6 (281) 403-0400
SUGAR CREEK 13827 Southwest Fwy (281) 491-8628 SIENNA PLANTATION 9034 Sienna Crossing Dr (281) 778-9959
NEW TERRITORY 5720 New Territory Blvd (281) 491-0811
Powered by FlippingBook