Farmer Family Foundation addresses nursing shortage with $2.35 million gift

Donation creates partnership between UC College of Nursing and UC Health

A $2.35 million gift from the Farmer Family Foundation to UC Health targets the national nursing shortage and its impact on Greater Cincinnati, particularly in high-skill areas such as neurology and neuroscience.

The Farmer Family Fund in Neuroscience Nursing will provide incentives to graduates of the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing who begin their careers at UC Health, in any neurology practice training. Nurses must work for three years at UC Health to be eligible. The goal is that, after four years, a participating nurse will have their full tuition reimbursed.

The demand for neuroscience nurses is high, due in part to an aging population and an increase in neurological conditions. This need is amplified because these roles require extensive and ongoing education and skills training due to evolving advancements.

“Through this incredible gift, the Farmer Family Foundation is addressing a significant challenge that our institute and top academic medical centers across the nation face today,” said Tara Williams, chief nursing officer at UC Medical Center. “Investing and partnering with the esteemed UC College of Nursing will make an indelible impact on our patients.”

Supporting a workforce pipeline of expert care

For over 130 years, the UC College of Nursing has been preparing the next generation of nurse leaders to serve their communities. The college is nationally recognized for academic standards, technology application and research activity. The College of Nursing’s programs are ranked among the best by U.S. News & World Report. This generous gift from the Farmer Family Foundation supports the goal of educating, training and retaining UC nurses in the Cincinnati region. 

A partnership between the world-class Gardner Neuroscience Institute and the respected UC College of Nursing is a wonderful opportunity for our community and nursing students.

Mary Beth Martin executive director, Farmer Family Foundation

“The Farmer Family is pleased to continue its support of the region’s health,” said Mary Beth Martin, executive director of the Farmer Family Foundation. “A partnership between the world-class Gardner Neuroscience Institute and the respected UC College of Nursing is a wonderful opportunity for our community and nursing students.”

In the fall of 2025, 125 additional students will join the college’s undergraduate program. The increased enrollment is an effort to contribute to a growing nursing workforce.

“The Farmer Family Foundation’s support for our future nurses and their contribution to patient care is visionary,” said Alicia Ribar, PhD, dean of the College of Nursing. “Giving our students the option of tuition reimbursement will be life-changing for them, personally, but also provide our region with highly-skilled, professionals who are critically needed.”

A history of support

The Farmer Family Foundation has a history of supporting the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute by investing in renovations of the neuro-ICU at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, the creation of the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute outpatient building and research initiatives. The institute provides comprehensive care for the most complex neurological patients across 15 specialties, including treatments for headache and facial pain, Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy, brain tumors, mood disorders, stroke, neuromuscular diseases such as ALS, diseases of the spine and Alzheimer’s disease.

Featured image at top: UC College of Nursing students. Photo/Chris Radcliffe for the UC Foundation.

This is how breakthroughs happen

Your generosity has illuminated what’s next: Student success beyond the classroom. Bearcats winning on the Big 12 stage. The gift of discovery for the health of our community. When you give to the University of Cincinnati and UC Health, you invest in the problem-solvers of tomorrow.

Related Stories

1

Driven by curiosity, guided by care

May 14, 2026

Max Wilson, a University of Cincinnati College of Allied Health Sciences health sciences major on the pre-physician assistant track, found his path expanding beyond the classroom and into hands-on research focused on human performance and patient care.

2

New cohort of nursing students get ready to join co-ops

May 14, 2026

A new chapter is beginning for more than 100 University of Cincinnati College of Nursing rising seniors as they embark on one of the most distinctive experiences in undergraduate nursing education: the UC Nursing Co-op Program. The incoming cohort will fan out across Cincinnati's premier healthcare institutions, stepping into some of the most dynamic and specialized clinical environments in the region. Placement sites include UC Medical Center (UCMC), West Chester Hospital, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC) Burnet, College Hill, and Liberty campus.

3

Is a colonoscopy painful?

May 13, 2026

The University of Cincinnati's Susan Kais, MD, assistant professor of clinical medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology in the College of Medicine and UC Health gastroenterologist, recently appeared on the ARC Cincinnati morning program on Local 12/WKRC-TV to answer common questions from viewers about colonoscopies and to dispel myths.