Desenzano Hospital and Brescia University Launch Nursing Diploma Program

The Desenzano Hospital Company and the Università di Brescia have signed an agreement to establish a university diploma program for nurses, with the Region designating the Desenzano facility as the training venue.

The project will now be implemented thanks to the collaboration between the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery of the University and the Corporate Training Office directed by Rossella Goglioni.

Nursing training in Desenzano has a well-established tradition; nearly thirty years. The first regional school was opened in 1972. It closed in 1996, when the responsibility for this sector was transferred to the University.

Objectives of the training and planned courses

“Our company — highlights the training manager Rossella Goglioni — has included training among the strategic goals of our plan, to be carried out through lifelong learning and basic training. The first involves all personnel, and for this year, we are planning multi-level activities.”

I mention two: a course for dialysis nurses and a course in oncology.

Basic training, on the other hand, aims to prepare healthcare professionals: the agreement signed with the University is precisely in this direction.”

Methods and location of the course

The course will be held at the Monte Croce Hospital for theoretical lessons, while the theoretical-practical component will be hosted by other hospital facilities of the company.

This current initiative is coordinated by Enrica Podavini and is based in the Training Office.

For more information, you can call from 8:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and from 2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Monday to Friday) at 030-9120457, or at 9120034.

The number of spots allocated for the course at the Desenzano company is eighty. The satisfaction of health authorities, from Alfonso Castellani, medical director, to Angelo Foschini, general manager, is evident.

“Personnel training is considered by this company a strategic lever to confirm — says Foschini — a corporate model that places the user with their needs at the center of public intervention.”

Castellani, instead, recalls “the great success of the courses in comicotherapy and for operating room nurses.”

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