Pediatric nurse practitioner-primary care

University of Missouri-Columbia
Doctor of nursing practice
Pediatric nurse practitioner.
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Doctor of nursing practice

Dedicate yourself to a career advancing child and adolescent health with an online doctor of nursing practice (DNP) with a pediatric nurse practitioner (PNP)-primary care emphasis. A choice of two formats — bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) to DNP or a master of science in nursing (MSN) to DNP — starts where you are to build off your existing knowledge and experience and get you closer to your goal.

Both formats train you to provide comprehensive care to this population, including managing common and chronic conditions. In the process, you’ll grow your leadership skills and understanding of technology in nursing and take on a broader view of health care, including the effects of access and quality on population health. Based on your schedule, you have the option of enrolling full or part time to progress at your own pace.

Students who complete this program combining online course work with in-person clinical assignments are eligible to sit for Pediatric Nursing Certification Board (PNCB) and American Nurse Credentialing Center (ANCC) exams.

Quick facts

Official name

Doctor of nursing practice with an emphasis in pediatric nurse practitioner-primary care

Campus

University of Missouri-Columbia

Program type

Doctorate

Academic home

Sinclair School of Nursing

Delivery mode

Blended, some campus visits required

Accreditation

Higher Learning Commission, Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education

Credit hours

72

Estimated cost

$43,200.00

*This cost is for illustrative purposes only. Your hours and costs will differ, depending on your transfer hours, your course choices and your academic progress. See more about tuition and financial aid.

About the online DNP with a PNP-primary care emphasis

After earning at least a BSN, you’ve likely honed your general nursing skills in a setting placing you in contact with a variety of patients. In thinking about the path forward, you might see yourself as a leader who drives change at patient, system and population levels and as a professional assisting pediatric patients and their families.

Pediatric nurse practitioners step up to the surging demand for advanced clinical skills while focusing their knowledge toward patients from infancy through young adulthood. PNPs in primary care spearhead preventative and management efforts involving this age group and use technology and research to improve care outcomes and population health. 

The mission of the University of Missouri’s Sinclair School of Nursing shapes the objectives of the online DNP with a pediatric nurse practitioner-primary care specialization. All online DNP programs at their core emphasize the importance of health across populations in Missouri and beyond and the role evidence-based practice, scholarship, diversity, inclusivity and equity play in care quality, outcomes and access. 

All students begin with a general DNP core expanding on the concepts introduced during a BSN or MSN program while infusing principles of leadership and research-backed decisions into the curriculum. You’ll:

  • Focus on the delivery of care, especially to underserved populations, by examining the intersection of inquiry, the humanities and the sciences
  • Begin to develop cross-disciplinary leadership skills that allow you to influence care outcomes at individual through population levels
  • Continue exploring nursing technologies for evaluating care delivery in relation to cost and outcomes
  • Understand how diverse scientific data shapes evidence-based care and practice
  • Examine care quality, access, disparities and outcomes from a holistic angle, considering social, economic, cultural and environmental factors

From here, the pediatric nurse practitioner-primary care emphasis translates these competencies to instruct you in improving outcomes, quality, access and policy for child and adolescent patients. Through this sequence, you’ll:

  • Strengthen your skills in diagnosing and managing pediatric primary health conditions and prescribing medications
  • Prepare to direct physical and psychological assessments, as well as health promotion and disease prevention efforts
  • Develop clinical leadership and evaluation skills to not only assist patients but consider more wide-reaching health outcomes
  • Understand how to influence policy related to care access and delivery for pediatric patients
Pediatric nurse practitioner.

Career prospects

As the health care system rapidly evolves, the Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts 45% more demand for nurse practitioners, anesthetists and midwives between 2020 and 2030.

A range of health care entities focusing on children and adolescents seek out pediatric nurse practitioners with a primary care specialty, including family practices, school health programs, specialty care, public health organizations, teen clinics and youth-focused rehabilitation, outpatient centers and home health agencies. Potential job titles include:

  • Primary care provider for children and youth
  • Health care services coordinator
  • Institutional health care consultant
  • Research nurse
  • Clinical instructor
Burning Glass Technologies. 2021. Salary numbers and employment growth numbers are based on models that consider advertised job posting salary, Bureau of Labor Statistics data and other proprietary and public sources of information for multiple occupations.
13.27%
Employment growth
Burning Glass Technologies. 2021. Salary numbers and employment growth numbers are based on models that consider advertised job posting salary, Bureau of Labor Statistics data and other proprietary and public sources of information for multiple occupations.
$97,000
Median salary

Live webinar: Apr. 9! Register today.

Learn more about doctorate, master's and graduate certificate program offerings during a live online presentation by Miriam Butler from MU's Sinclair School of Nursing. Get answers to your career questions.

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Program structure

The online DNP with a PNP-primary care emphasis involves a minimum of 72 credit hours across course work and clinical experiences.

The program uses a blended format. No matter if you’re coming off a BSN or MSN degree, you’ll complete most of your course work online and attend clinical assignments in person. Students are further advised to plan for an in-person orientation session before the program begins and periodic on-campus visits as needed.

Courses are semester-based. How long it takes to complete the program depends on your academic progress so far. If you already have a master’s degree, you can study part time and complete the program in three years. If you have a bachelor’s degree and want to study part time, the program is more likely to take you five or six years.

For students enrolled in the BSN-to-DNP program, you’ll begin with a 27 credit-hour core. This sequence goes over the role of research in establishing evidence-based care and encouraging change from within a health care setting, health science concepts, public health and policy, issues in advanced nursing care, epidemiology, family dynamics, data and statistics usage and health disparities for underserved populations.

From here, 9.5 credit hours of clinical courses enrich your knowledge of physiological topics across the lifespan, drug therapies for episodic and chronic health conditions, diagnostic techniques and conducting physical assessments. These courses are joined by the PNP emphasis (35.5 to 37 credit hours), a DNP residency project requiring you to assess population or other critical health needs and a clinical residency designed to strengthen your practice and leadership skills.

The sequence for MSN-to-DNP candidates pulls select courses from across each segment to supplement and specialize what you’ve already learned. 

Course work covers

Once you begin the PNP sequence, you’ll learn about:

  • Health maintenance, promotion and diagnostic techniques for newborn through adolescent patients
  • Reproductive and sexual health relevant to this population
  • Conducting psychiatric, developmental and physiological assessments, including for chronically ill children
  • Advanced assessment, diagnostic and procedural skills
  • Identifying and responding to pediatric patient safety issues
  • Leadership and policy change in advanced nursing practice

Review the full list of courses and descriptions for the online DNP with a pediatric nurse practitioner-primary care emphasis.

Delivery

Blended, some campus visits required

Calendar system

Semester-based

Typical program length

4-5 years

Typical course load

Part time

Accreditation

The University of Missouri is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission, one of six regional institutional accreditors in the United States. The DNP at the Sinclair School is accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education.

Learn more about this program

This program is administered by the Sinclair School of Nursing