Your Guide to Success in Purdue Global's Primary Care Programs.
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This page provides essential information for all students enrolled in the Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) or Adult-Gerontology Primary Care Nurse Practitioner (AGPCNP) tracks. Clinical requirements and expectations vary slightly based on your enrollment year.
Some information differs depending on your clinical course sequence. Select your program version below:
Four clinical courses; each course requires 160 hours for a total of 640 hours
Patient encounter minimum: 1 patient for every 1 clinical hour, 640 minimum
Hours cannot be carried over between courses
Direct patient care hours required; In-person & telehealth visits permitted under preceptor supervision.
Telehealth allowed for up to 50% of total program hours (320 hours max). Specific courses have further restrictions. Select your program version above for more details.
Preceptor and site required for each course
Preceptors must work in outpatient settings (family practice, internal medicine, etc.)
Patient Age Ranges:
FNP Students: Pediatrics/Adolescents 0-19, Adults 18-64, Geriatrics 65+
AGPCNP Students: Ages 13 and older
Visit the Clinical Placement Process Page for more information.
Introductory Course: Focuses on physical assessment, differential diagnosis, charting, critical thinking, and foundational skills.
Specialty Rotations: Women's health, pediatric/adolescent, frail elderly
Final Course (MN610 / NU610): Board certification prep, licensing information review, primary care synthesis, and other key post-graduation areas.
What counts toward clinical hours?
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Time documented as clinical hours must be time spent in direct patient care activities.
The requirements for clinical sites and hours are detailed by the National Task Force on Quality Nurse Practitioner Education (NTF). Per Standard III of the NTF criteria, “Direct Patient Care Clinical Hours” refers to hours in which direct clinical care is provided to patients.
Clinical experiences and time spent in each experience should be varied and distributed in a way that prepares you to provide care to the populations served. All clinical experience activities must be completed under the direct supervision of your preceptor.
You may count the hours spent in “grand rounds” or other patient-focused medical education activities that occur on the assigned unit, for no more than 5% of your total hours for the clinical rotation.
All clinical hours must be supervised by your approved preceptor during the academic term in which you are registered for the clinical course. Your clinical hour logs must accurately reflect each date, time, and hours you were present at your approved clinical site and engaged in direct patient care activities under the supervision of your approved preceptor. Any instance of fabricated information in your hours or field encounter logs can result in disciplinary action under the university’s code of student conduct.
Telehealth Hours
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If you are in a Primary Care or Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program, you may include time spent in on-site patient care and telehealth hours (when appropriate for the course/program). You may complete no more than 50% of the total clinical hours required for your program in telehealth.
When completing telehealth hours, you must hold an active, unencumbered RN license in the state where the site and preceptor are based.
What is not considered direct care patient contact hours?
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Lunch (whether spent in the office or out) and travel time to, from, or between sites (if traveling from one site to another). For clinical days of 8–9 hours, a minimum of one 30-minute break is highly recommended. If you are not able to take lunch, please note in the clinical log the reason for not taking one.
Any “rounding up” of clinical hours (i.e., counting 3.5 hours as 4) will be considered academic dishonesty and may result in failure of the course and possible dismissal from the program.
Logging Patient Encounters
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You are required to document all patient encounters in the Field Encounters section of the clinical management system. This documentation must include information such as age, ethnicity, a SOAP note, and billing/coding details. You must ensure that your logs do not contain any personally identifiable information.
The minimum number of required field encounters is specified on each specific program's page. While these are the minimum requirements, you must log information for every patient you encounter during your clinical rotation, even if the total patients you saw exceeds the minimum. For example, if you see 200 patients but the course requires only 160, you must log all 200 encounters.
By logging all patient encounters, you demonstrate compliance with documentation standards and ensure that you have complete records for legal purposes.
Final Evaluations
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You must have at least one final clinical evaluation per clinical course completed by your preceptor(s). If you log 40+ clinical hours with a preceptor, their evaluation is required. If under 40 hours is completed with a preceptor, that preceptor's evaluation is optional. To pass the clinical course, you must achieve 3.0 or above on all assessed items in every final preceptor evaluation. All completed preceptor evaluations contribute to the final grade in the clinical course. If any final preceptor evaluation shows an unsatisfactory score on any assessed item, you will not pass the clinical and must retake the course.
Unsuccessful Attempt at Clinical Course
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The grade of “B” is the minimum acceptable grade for graduate nurse practitioner clinical courses. If you do not earn the required grade in a clinical course and must repeat the class, you must repeat all required clinical hours and field encounters. You must also have a passing preceptor evaluation from your course repeat. If repeating a clinical course, please work with your Clinical Student Manager to submit a site and preceptor to be approved for the repeated course/rotation.
Some roles may be limited to specific rotations or further requirements may be needed for a certain course.
Nurse Practitioner (NP) that is board certified in a primary care specialty (Family Nurse Practitioner, Adult-Gero Primary Care Nurse Practitioner)
Medical Doctor (MD) or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) that specializes in primary care (Family Medicine, Internal Medicine (outpatient))
Certified Physician Assistant (PA) that practices in a primary care specialty (excludes AZ and PA students). If you're in a state that requires physician supervision, the physician's license and specialty will be reviewed.
Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) that is board certified through ANCC, holds prescriptive authority, and is employed in a primary care setting in a direct patient care role (Adult Health CNS, Adult-Gerontology CNS)
Begin identifying sites/preceptors in your first term. Follow deadlines for paperwork (e.g., affiliation agreements, pre-clinical requirements). Click on a button below for more information.
Find your Clinical Student Manager (CSM) by Program & State for any clinical questions.
Contact your Student Success Manager (SSM) at 866-522-7747 for any enrollment/registration questions.