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Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) Fellowship

Advance your psychiatric training through integrated, real-world clinical experience.

Develop the skills to provide high-quality mental health care across outpatient, crisis, and community-based settings.

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Why Choose Peak Vista for Your PMHNP Fellowship

Integrated Psychiatry in Primary Care

Deliver mental health care within a primary care team, supporting whole-person treatment in a collaborative setting.

Diverse Clinical Psychiatry Experience

Gain experience across outpatient, crisis, inpatient, and specialty settings, including developmental disabilities.

Structured Learning and Clinical Mentorship

Strengthen clinical decision-making through supervision, didactics, and evidence-based training.

Learn More About the PMHNP Fellowship Below

Fellowship Program Overview

Peak Vista’s PMHNP Fellowship is a 12-month, full-time postgraduate training program designed to support the transition into independent outpatient psychiatric practice. Fellows train within an integrated safety-net health system serving individuals and families facing access barriers to behavioral health care.

Each year, we select five Fellows for the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) Fellowship. The program is based at the Health Center at Printers Parkway (340)(opens in a new tab) in Colorado Springs and provides immersive clinical experience within a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) serving diverse and underserved communities.

The PMHNP Fellowship plans to pursue national accreditation during the 2026–2027 cycle, further strengthening its commitment to high-quality, standards-based postgraduate psychiatric training.

The PMHNP Fellowship combines structured mentorship, supervised psychiatric practice, and competency-based progression within a federally qualified health center. Fellows deliver direct psychiatric care as licensed APRNs while strengthening diagnostic clarity, medication management confidence, and interdisciplinary collaboration.

The PMHNP Fellowship experience includes:
  • A dedicated integrated Fellowship clinic at Health Center at Printers Parkway (340)(opens in a new tab) serving diverse and underserved patient populations.
  • Structured mentorship with experienced psychiatric faculty.
  • Supervised outpatient psychiatry immersion.
  • Exposure to complex behavioral health and dual-diagnosis populations.
  • Interdisciplinary collaboration with primary care and behavioral health teams.
  • Out-rotations in crisis, inpatient, and specialty settings.
  • A required population-focused Quality Improvement (QI) project.
  • Ongoing psychiatric education and review sessions to support clinical decision-making and practice readiness.
This model prepares Fellows for confident, independent psychiatric practice in community-based settings.

The PMHNP Fellowship program is a full-time, 12-month salaried position with a competitive benefits package(opens in a new tab).

What to Expect From the Fellowship

The PMHNP Fellowship is a structured, full-time 12-month program designed to build progressive autonomy in outpatient psychiatry. Fellows gradually increase patient panel responsibility under dedicated preceptor supervision.

Clinical immersion includes:
  • Five Fellows with three dedicated preceptors.
  • Precepted outpatient psychiatry practice.
  • Gradual increase to a full patient panel.
  • Integrated behavioral health collaboration.
Our Fellows are licensed Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRNs) authorized to practice at an advanced level under Colorado regulations while participating in structured postgraduate training.

The curriculum integrates experiential learning with structured didactic reinforcement to support safe, evidence-based psychiatric practice. Educational components are designed to align with nationally recognized competency frameworks for advanced psychiatric training and transition-to-practice development.

Fellows train primarily within the integrated Fellowship clinic at the Health Center at Printers Parkway (340)(opens in a new tab), with structured out-rotations to broaden specialty exposure.

Program foundations include:
  • Benner’s Novice to Expert Model.
  • Adapted ACGME Psychiatry Milestones.
  • Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN).
  • National Academy of Medicine recommendations.
  • NeuroScience Education Institute (NEI) principles.
Didactic education includes:
  • Problem-based learning.
  • Case studies and round table discussions.
  • Monthly board review.
  • Directed CME.
  • Ongoing prescriptive mentorship.

Fellows gain exposure to diverse psychiatric settings to strengthen diagnostic range and systems-based care understanding.

Rotations and community-based experiences include:Additional exposure may include partnerships with regional organizations such as Children’s Hospital and Peak View Hospital.

These experiences expand exposure to acute care stabilization, chronic psychiatric management, and interdisciplinary coordination.

Fellows complete a population-focused Quality Improvement (QI) project using a Plan-Do-Study-Act framework. This reinforces systems-based psychiatric care and measurable practice improvement.

The program fulfills Colorado DORA requirements, including:
  • 750 hours of precepted prescriptive practice.
  • Formal mentorship agreement.
  • Structured milestone-based evaluation.

Program Leadership & Accreditation

The PMHNP Fellowship is led by experienced psychiatric clinicians dedicated to safety-net behavioral health and postgraduate education.

Patricia Bursnall

Patricia Bursnall, DNP, FNP-C, PMHNP-BC

PMHNP Fellowship Director

Patricia Bursnall is the Director of the PMHNP Fellowship. She brings a 16-year background in family practice, therapy, and psychiatric care to this role. She also credits her leadership background as a lead clinician and school administrator, as well as her lecture background at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and Anschutz campuses, the FNP Fellowship, and University of Haiti to assisting her in preparation for launching the PMHNP Fellowship.

"My approach is to educate the whole person. Each PMHNP Fellow brings their unique skills to this program, and I see my job as nurturing those strengths and building on areas for growth. As a provider, I treat the whole person. I need to be able to carefully listen, ask critical questions, listen some more, and work with the patient and the community toward their treatment goals."

Patricia has two passions: working with the underserved and bicycling. She loves mountain and gravel biking; has been a biking guide, coach for adolescents, and referee at the Colorado High School Mountain Biking League races; and even completed a world biking tour. Patricia has worked and lived with her husband and child in Colorado Springs for over 25 years.

Elena Ollis

Dr. Elena Ollis, DNP, PMHNP-BC

PMHNP Fellowship Staff

Elena Ollis is a board certified Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP). She obtained her BSN in nursing with a minor in psychology at Seton Hall University. She engaged in skilled nursing home visits prior to working as a psychiatric registered nurse in Princeton House, an inpatient psychiatric facility. Elena obtained her master’s in nursing with a PMHNP specialty from Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey, and has been practicing as a PMHNP for the past 12 years in a variety of settings. Some of the those include nursing care facilities where she served as a PMHNP liaison/consultant, outpatient private practice, and a non-profit outpatient psychiatric clinic, where she engaged in an interdisciplinary NIH initiative focused on treating early onset psychosis in adolescents and young adults. Elena has been a member of the Peak Vista provider team since 2019. As Peak Vista’s first PMHNP, Elena lent her expertise to numerous primary care providers (and continues to do so today), helped open this organization’s first psychiatric health center, served as a clinical preceptor to multiple PMHNP students, provided didactic education to FNP Fellows, and lectured at UCCS. Most recently, Elena transitioned into her role as Attending Faculty for the PMHNP Fellowship.

Throughout her career, Elena’s passion and her professional drive have always been directed toward providing care for underserved populations within communities where the care is most needed and is least available. Elena’s Rogerian style empathetic listening approaches and her strong belief in evidence-based shared-decision making practice has enabled her to stay engaged and passionate about her craft.

When not engaged in new professional ventures or further educational pursuits, Elena enjoys playing violin, reading, hiking, biking, and spending time with her husband and her young daughter.

Becky Sours

Becky Sours, FNP-C, PMHNP-BC

PMHNP Fellowship Staff

Becky Sours is a board certified Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP). She brings 16 years of diverse nursing experience in a variety of settings, including rural and underserved communities in Colorado, a variety of teaching and instructing, and family practice. Becky worked as adjunct faculty for Adams State University and precepted undergraduate nursing students and others during her time as a bachelor’s prepared nurse. She obtained both her master’s degree and Post-Masters Certification through Regis University. As a family nurse practitioner, she precepted students entering the family practice profession. She joined Peak Vista as a Fellow in the first ever PMHNP Fellowship group and will continue as attending faculty.

“I have a passion for learning and consider myself a lifelong learner. Holistic care is at the core of my beliefs, and it's my goal to treat every individual with the respect and dignity they deserve. In caring for those with psychiatric illness, working as a family nurse practitioner has allowed me to understand the complexities of both medical and psychiatric conditions and how they both impact the human body – ensuring patients receive the best care possible.”

In her spare time, you can find Becky outdoors and in the mountains. She loves spending time with her family, which includes her three corgis and a large, mixed breed that adopted the family years ago. Becky is an avid sports fan and can be seen at Nuggets, Broncos, Avalanche, and Rockies games (and her children’s games and activities, of course)!

Linda Estrada

Linda Estrada

Fellowship Program Coordinator

As a Colorado native, Linda always felt a strong calling to serve the underserved members of her community. She began her journey at Peak Vista in 2023 as a receptionist, where she experienced firsthand the realities of patient care and built meaningful relationships with those who rely on them most. That role deepened her compassion and strengthened her commitment to healthcare access for all.

“Today, as a Fellowship Coordinator, I’m honored to support our Fellows as they learn and grow. I’m passionate about helping them see the impact they can make and guiding them to approach their work with empathy, purpose, and a heart for service.”

Peak Vista’s PMHNP Fellowship is preparing to apply for national accreditation through the ANCC Practice Transition Accreditation Program (PTAP) in fall 2026. Upon successful accreditation, the 2024 and 2025 cohorts will be grandfathered under the accredited program.

The Fellowship curriculum is aligned with nationally recognized standards in psychiatric nurse practitioner education, including ACGME milestone competencies, Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) graduate competencies, and the National Academy of Medicine recommendations for transition-to-practice programs.

Learn about Quality & Accreditation(opens in a new tab) at Peak Vista.

Peak Vista maintains AAAHC accreditation and operates as a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC). Fellows train within a system committed to patient safety, regulatory compliance, and evidence-based behavioral health integration.

Institutional standards include:
  • AAAHC Accreditation through the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care , reflecting compliance with national benchmarks for ambulatory patient safety, behavioral health integration, clinical governance, and performance improvement. Accreditation requires regular external review and demonstration of measurable quality outcomes.
  • Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) designation, requiring federal quality reporting, board governance standards, and adherence to Health Center Program regulations to ensure accessible, equitable care delivery.
  • Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) eligibility, providing medical malpractice liability protection under federal guidelines. FTCA status reflects compliance with federal risk management standards and ensures structured oversight of clinical policies and procedures.
  • A Formal Corporate Compliance Plan and Standards of Conduct, guiding ethical decision-making, regulatory adherence, privacy protections, and responsible stewardship of public resources. All staff and providers are accountable to these standards.
Training within this environment ensures that Fellows develop not only clinical competence, but also a strong understanding of regulatory frameworks, systems-based care delivery, and organizational accountability – core competencies for advanced psychiatric practice in community health settings.

Application & Timeline

Peak Vista’s PMHNP Fellowship is designed to strengthen psychiatric diagnostic reasoning, medication management confidence, and readiness for independent outpatient practice. The annual recruitment cycle supports identification of applicants aligned with safety-net behavioral health and community impact.

Applicants are encouraged to prepare materials early in the recruitment cycle.

Typical timeline:
  • November: Applications open.
  • Mid-March: Application deadline.
  • March - April: Interviews conducted.
  • Spring: Admission decisions released.
  • September: Fellowship begins.
Each cohort includes five Fellows, allowing for focused mentorship and structured competency development.

The PMHNP Fellowship seeks clinicians who are committed to providing psychiatric medication management services to underserved populations and interested structured postgraduate growth.

Applicants must:
  • Graduate from an accredited PMHNP program prior to orientation.
  • Be eligible for active and unrestricted Colorado RN and NP licensure.
  • Demonstrate RN[PD7.1] or psychiatric clinical experience.
  • Commit to a 12-month full-time training experience.
Full application details are available on the Apply page, which will be provided during active enrollment.

Peak Vista hosts live PMHNP Q&A and Information Sessions during each recruitment cycle to provide prospective applicants with direct access to Fellowship leadership. These sessions offer an opportunity to better understand the structure, expectations, and clinical experience of the program before submitting an application.

The PMHNP informational Q&A is typically held in late January from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Mountain Time (MT). Updated registration information is shared during the fall recruitment season.

During the session, participants can:
  • Hear directly from the PMHNP Fellowship Director and faculty.
  • Gain clarification on curriculum structure and clinical expectations.
  • Learn how outpatient psychiatry is integrated within a safety-net setting.
  • Ask detailed questions about application requirements and interview preparation.
  • Understand how the Fellowship supports prescriptive confidence and independent practice readiness.
  • Connect with program leadership before submitting materials.
Participation is optional but strongly encouraged for applicants seeking deeper insight into the Fellowship experience and alignment with Peak Vista’s mission.

Questions that Fellowship Applicants Ask Most

Program Structure & Experience

The Fellowship is a structured, competency-based training program with dedicated mentorship, protected learning time, and milestone evaluations. While Fellows provide patient care as licensed APRNs, the experience is intentionally designed for supervised skill development rather than independent full productivity expectations.

Peak Vista offers Nurse Practitioner Fellowships, which are similar in structure to what some institutions call a residency program. Both terms refer to structured postgraduate training designed to support transition into independent practice.

Application & Selection

Each program accepts five Fellows annually, and application volume varies year to year. Applicants are encouraged to apply early and ensure all materials are complete by the deadline.

Interviews typically occur in March and April following the application deadline. Selected applicants are contacted directly to schedule interviews after the review process begins.

Clinical Practice & Scope

Fellows provide direct patient care as licensed APRNs under structured supervision and mentorship. Clinical autonomy increases progressively throughout the year as competency milestones are achieved.

Yes. The PMHNP Fellowship includes structured exposure to inpatient psychiatry, crisis services, developmental disabilities care, and integrated primary care settings. These experiences provide Fellows with a broad understanding of psychiatric practice within a safety-net health system and strengthen readiness for independent outpatient practice.

Compensation & Benefits

Yes, the Fellowship is a full-time, salaried position with a competitive benefits package(opens in a new tab).

Fellows receive employee benefits consistent with Peak Vista policies. As part of a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), Peak Vista maintains eligibility for Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) malpractice liability protection.

Licensing & Eligibility

Applicants must be eligible for active and unrestricted Colorado RN and NP licensure prior to the start of the program. Licensure must be finalized before orientation.

Yes. While the program is designed for recent graduates, transitioning APRNs or those re-entering clinical practice may be considered based on experience and alignment with program goals.

For Universities & Faculty

Peak Vista welcomes partnerships with academic institutions and encourages faculty to share Fellowship opportunities with eligible graduating students. Information session links and promotional materials can be provided upon request.

Yes. Fellowship leadership regularly participates in virtual presentations, Q&A sessions, and professional development events. Universities may contact the Fellowship team to coordinate speaking engagements.