
Michele Davidson, PhD, CNM, CFN, RN
Telephone: (703) 993-1924
mdavidso@gmu.edu
Fax: (703) 993-3612
This certificate program offers formal study in theory and practice in applied forensic science and nursing for nurses with a bachelor's degree in nursing or individuals in another discipline with a baccalaureate degree from an accredited institution.
Students applying to the certificate program must be enrolled in graduate degree status or hold a bachelor’s degree. Application is made through the Admissions Office of the University. A requirement for the certificate is 15 credits of graduate course work in which a 3.00 GPA is earned.
The program for the certificate consists of 15 credits in forensic science. Students who already hold certification as a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) or non-nurses are exempt from NURS 734 and will be required to take GCH 602 in place of NURS 734.
The GMU forensic program focuses on the application of forensics from a social science perspective and prepares graduates to work with clients in a variety of practice settings. Graduates of the GMU forensic nursing program will provide services to victims of violence and abuse including, but not limited to, sexual assault, child abuse, elder abuse, homicide, and drug or alcohol abuse. Forensic nurses work in a variety of public health and public safety settings, as well as in the private sector. The scope of practice is broad and can include product tampering, environmental hazards, medicolegal death investigation, sexual assault examination, and epidemiological issues. Clinical roles include emergency and trauma care, corrections, nurse investigator/evidence collection, psychiatric mental health, sexual assault nurse examiner, and nurse coroner positions. The legal nurse consultant is another role that specializes in forensic practice and providing expertise in legal matters. Forensic practitioners often care for living clients and train other nurses to appropriately assess and care for these victims. As a member of an interdisciplinary team, the forensic nurse possesses expertise in normal anatomy and physiology, assessment skills, determination of causative factors of injuries, and use of therapeutic communication. The GMU forensics program is sound in terms of theory, clinical decision-making skills, and field experiences. The program is comprised of an interdisciplinary faculty that possesses expertise in nursing, criminal justice, death investigation, and forensic science. Many of the faculty members are nationally recognized experts within the various fields of the forensic specialties.
Course titles are followed by numbers in parentheses (0:0:0), separated by colons. The numbers have the following significance:
For independent study, readings, topics, or similar courses, individual instructors set hours.