In short order, local residents will have the opportunity to study nursing in the Drumheller area without leaving their home community.
At the Festivalley celebration hosted by the Drumheller Area Health Foundation on Saturday, March 29, it was announced the expansion of the Grow Your Own Bachelor of Science in Nursing program. This is a collaboration with Alberta Health Services and the University of Calgary to allow students living in the Drumheller area to study and complete their Bachelor of Nursing program while living in their home community.
Drumheller will be the third and final site for such a program, with the program already in place in Drayton Valley and Wainwright.
The Drumheller intake for the program will begin in October for a September 2026 start.
“This program is delivered by the University of Calgary, supported by the operational staff out here,” explains Carolyn Trumpur of AHS. “This model works. The first time we got this up and running was in the Wainwright community. We launched this during the pandemic. While the pandemic had lots of very negative things that happened, what it did help us move forward with was understanding how we could deliver university degrees and education to rural communities without people having to actually travel to urban communities for their education.”
The first cohort of Wainwright students is graduating this year.
“It is clear when students are able to train at home, they are more likely to stay at home and serve there in communities after graduation,” said Trumpur. “It is backed by the community, it is driven by collaboration and is focused on the future of rural health care.”
Access to the program will be limited to students within 130 kilometres of Drumheller and be restricted to students who are rural. While the students will be based at their home, they will have the opportunity to work in various rural sites throughout the zone.
The Drumheller Area Health Foundation will support the program by creating a simulation lab. The university is providing the equipment, creating a rural hub of excellence.
“This will support the surrounding communities with rurally trained registered nurses," said Jack Watts, of the Drumheller Area Health Foundation. “We are very excited to have this opportunity to continue to support the great people, patients and residents of the Health Centre.
Health Minister Arianna LaGrange provided her comments for the crowd assembled.
“One of the ways we are making sure Alberta has the nurses it needs is by providing more nursing education close to home, so locals can learn, train, and ultimately find employment right in their own communities. It is very exciting this will be happening right here in Drumheller," said LaGrange.