Six decades ago, Indian River State College made a promise to the Treasure Coast: we will train the nurses this community needs. As the college reflects on the 60th anniversary of Indian River State College’s Associate Degree Nursing program, that promise has never been stronger.

Since 1965, thousands of graduates have walked out of this program and into emergency rooms, ICUs, pediatric wards, and community clinics across our region and beyond. Today, when you walk into Cleveland Clinic or Lawnwood Regional Medical Center, there is a very good chance your nurse is an Indian River State College graduate — and that they chose to stay right here on the Treasure Coast to serve the community that trained them.
A Program Built for This Community
What makes Indian River State College’s nursing program truly distinctive is its deep roots in the region it serves. Executive Dean Dr. Patty Gagliano, who leads the college’s Health Sciences Division, describes a program that has grown alongside the community — one where it is not uncommon for a student to walk in and say their parent sat in the same classroom, trained in the same clinical settings, and built a career right here at home.

“It is a full circle life,” Dr. Gagliano shared on a recent episode of River Talk on Indian River State College Public Media. “When you see a parent and a child in our program, graduating and working — that speaks to the quality of what we do and the breadth and depth of who we reach.”

John Ramfjord, Senior Development Director at the Indian River State College Foundation, has seen that quality firsthand. In his first weeks on the job, he met with healthcare partners across the region and heard the same thing repeatedly: Indian River State College nurses are different.
“The stories I heard about hiring Indian River State College nurses meant that they were getting a quality employee,” Ramfjord said. “They weren’t leaving, they were staying. You hear stories all the time of high turnover in nursing and nursing shortages — but this is one of the few places at full capacity, in part because of the quality of students coming out of Indian River State College.”
That reach extends to Indian River State College’s state-of-the-art simulation center, located at the College’s Pruitt Campus in Port St. Lucie. The simulation center replicates a real nursing unit with 11 fully equipped rooms, the same alarms, tools, and equipment students will encounter in any acute care facility in the area. Students gain hands-on experience from birth to hospice care — all in a controlled, safe environment — before ever setting foot on a hospital floor. Ramfjord, who has toured nursing programs at colleges and universities across the country, is direct in his assessment.
“I have seen several other colleges and universities with nursing programs, and they pale in comparison to the resources that we have here for preparing our nurses,” he said. “It is second to none.”
It is, by any measure, one of the finest nursing training facilities in the state.
Celebrating 60 Years — and Funding the Next 60
To mark this milestone, the Indian River State College Foundation is launching the 60 for 60 Campaign — an initiative inviting the community to give $60 or more in celebration of 60 years of nursing excellence. Every gift will help shape the next generation of nurses, supporting scholarships, student resources, and faculty development.

As Dr. Gagliano put it, “Foundation support opens doors — for students to get into the campus, through scholarship, through the resources they need to be successful.” Faculty, she notes, are “the unsung heroes” of nursing education, providing the one-on-one mentoring and guidance that carries students across the finish line from student to nurse.
Ramfjord sees the campaign as a natural extension of the pride the community already has in this program. “The buy-in is a sense of pride that the community has in the quality of students that Indian River State College Nursing produces — and that’s what has allowed the 60 years to continue,” he said. “I’d like to see that continue, which is why we’re having this campaign.”
To learn more or get involved in the 60 for 60 Campaign before its official launch, contact John Ramfjord at 772-462-7244, or visit giving.irsc.edu.
Is Nursing Your Path? Find Out April 6th
Whether you are working a job you do not love, a recent graduate looking for direction, or a CNA or EMT ready to take the next step — Indian River State College wants to meet you where you are.

“It’s not a physical appearance where they all look the same,” Ramfjord noted of Indian River State College nursing students. “It’s the internal drive, the internal motivations. The willingness to care is what our nursing students look like.”
The college is hosting a Nursing and Health Sciences Open House on Monday, April 6th, from 4:30–6:30 p.m. at the Pruitt Campus. Simulation labs will be open, faculty will be on hand, and advisors, financial aid officers, and library services staff will all be available to answer your questions. It is a chance to see yourself in the role — and to see what 60 years of excellence looks like up close.
Learn more and plan your visit at irsc.edu.
River Talk is produced by Indian River State College Public Media and is available at wqcs.org. The full episode featuring Dr. Patty Gagliano and John Ramfjord is available now.