Family Nurse Practitioner Primary Care

Cupola atop a building on the Molloy University campus

Practice assessment, diagnosis, health promotion, and disease management in various primary care settings


This is for the APRN who wants to add Family Nurse Primary Care focus to their certifications, you can obtain a Post Masters Certificate as an FNP. The Family Nurse Practitioner Program curriculum has a strong academic and clinical basis in which students complete a course of study over 2 ½ to 3 years. 

Students develop competencies in assessment, diagnosis, health promotion, and disease management in various primary care settings. Students work with nurse practitioners and physician preceptors, where they experience learning in various clinical agencies and practice settings.

Students participate in a minimum of 500 clinical practicum hours where they work closely with a family nurse practitioner and other primary care providers in primary care settings. The FNP curriculum is unique in providing a strong foundation in understanding the business of primary care. This includes assessing a community to discover the primary care needs, learning how to develop a plan for having a fiscally viable practice, and working within the license and insurance regulations of the student’s state.