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New simulation lab opens in Windham Hospital for Eastern nursing students

Lab is the only hospital-based nurse-training facility in eastern Connecticut

Written by Mike Rouleau

Published on September 25, 2025

Nursing students cut the ribbon on the new Center for Education, Simulation, and Innovation (Eastern/HHC CESI) at Windham Hospital.

Eastern nursing students practice on high-fidelity manikins in the new simulation lab.

Windham Hospital nurses demonstrate the new lab's equipment.

Nursing students take the spotlight as President Karim Ismaili gives remarks.

Windham Hospital nurses demonstrate the new lab's equipment.

Windham Hospital President Donna Handley holds a proclamation beside State Representatives Irene Haines, Gregg Haddad, Susan Johnson, and Senator Mae Flexer.

Eastern Connecticut State University and Hartford Healthcare unveiled a brand-new nursing simulation lab in Windham Hospital on Sept. 24. With Eastern students, state dignitaries, and Connecticut State University/Hartford HealthCare executives in attendance, the ceremony marked a momentous development in an effort to alleviate the region's nursing shortage.

The new simulation lab is the largest such facility in eastern Connecticut at 6,500 square feet. Called the Eastern Connecticut State University/Hartford HealthCare Center for Education Simulation and Innovation (Eastern/HHC CESI), the lab is a high-tech hospital-based simulation unit and the final piece to Eastern's new Bachelor of Science in Nursing program, which has just enrolled its third cohort this fall 2025 semester.

"The opening of the nursing simulation lab at Windham Hospital marks an important step forward for Eastern's nursing program," said Eastern President Karim Ismaili. "In this space, our students will learn, practice, and gain confidence in a setting that mirrors the realities of modern healthcare. Thanks to the partnership of Hartford HealthCare, this state-of-the-art training environment will prepare students with the technical skills, judgment, and compassion needed to transform lives and address the urgent nursing shortage in Connecticut."

Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont: "As a state, we try to work with Eastern to make it easier for nursing students to have easy access to the most sophisticated equipment out there."

Eastern President Karim Ismaili: "In this space, our students will learn, practice, and gain confidence in a setting that mirrors the realities of modern healthcare."

Nursing student Beatrice Sierra: "This lab provides a safe space to learn, make mistakes, and learn about our field."

John Maduko, interim chancellor of the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities: "When we invest in things like this for our universities, we make a huge impact on our communities."

Jeffrey Flaks, president and CEO of Hartford HealthCare: "This collaboration is a model for how health systems and universities can work together to solve workforce challenges."

Featuring high-tech simulation spaces with industry-standard hospital equipment, the "sim lab" will help prepare Eastern nursing students for all aspects of nursing practice.

"This is more than a lab - it's a commitment to our communities," said Donna Handley, president of Windham Hospital. "By embedding this simulation center within a hospital setting, we're giving students a real-world environment to learn and grow."

Nursing students demonstrate nursing simulation lab equipment
Nursing students practice on high-fidelity manikins in the new simulation lab. 

Eastern nursing students will begin using the simulation lab this fall semester for labs in psychiatric nursing, medical surgical nursing, and fundamentals in health assessment. Other disciplines the lab will serve include maternity, pediatric, geriatric, and community nursing.

"With state-of-the-art manikins that simulate everything from basic nursing skills to complex medical emergencies, students are immersed in realistic, fast-paced scenarios that reflect the challenges of today's healthcare environments," said Stephen Donahue, system director of operations for the Center for Education, Simulation and Innovation (CESI) at Hartford HealthCare.

Among the lab's designated simulation spaces are an ICU room, a labor and delivery/pediatric care room, three standardized patient rooms where students can interact with real-life patients, a large tasks/training skills room with hospital beds, stretchers, high-fidelity manikins, and more.

"I am extremely impressed with the amount of advanced equipment available in the new simulation lab," said nursing student Miguel Torres. "While I knew the lab was coming, I didn't expect anything of this scale. It is amazing to have this resource as part of our nursing education at Eastern, as it provides a true hospital-like experience that will prepare us for the real world."

The new simulation lab at Windham Hospital - and Eastern's nursing program overall - was funded by a $1.2-million grant from the CT Health Horizons Initiative, a $35-million state effort aimed at addressing the nursing shortage in Connecticut.

According to CT Health Horizons, hundreds of nursing positions go unfilled each year as the rate of retirements and people leaving the field outpaces the number of new nurses. Additionally, there continues to be a shortage of seats in nursing programs to meet the enrollment demand for new nursing students.

Donna Handley, president of Windham Hospital and senior vice president at Hartford HealthCare: "By embedding this simulation center within a hospital setting, we're giving students a real-world environment to learn and grow."

Peter Yoo, chief academic officer at Hartford HealthCare: "We're not just opening a new facility, we're launching a powerful collaboration that will ensure the future of healthcare careers."

Nursing student Miguel Torres Vargas: "It is amazing to have this resource as part of our nursing education at Eastern. It provides a true hospital-like experience."

Nursing student James Spezzano: "What makes this simulation lab special is that it bridges the education we get in the classroom with the real-world experience that we need."

United States Congressman Joe Courtney: "This is the CSCUĀ mission ... helping people succeed and also making sure our labor market gets the right skillset and talent of people."

"This collaboration is a model for how health systems and universities can work together to solve workforce challenges," said Jeffrey Flaks, president and CEO of Hartford HealthCare. "We are proud to partner with Eastern to create a learning environment that not only trains nurses but inspires them. Together, we are investing in the future of healthcare - one student, one simulation, one life-changing experience at a time."

At 138 students since its inception, the BSN program is one of Eastern's fastest-growing majors.

Nursing students gather at ribbon cutting ceremony
A group of nursing students gather in Windham Hospital for the ribbon-cutting ceremony.

According to Eastern's nursing clinicals director, Christina Nadeau, the partnership between Eastern and HHC is also meant to address the "clinical- and academic-practice gap" for new nurses by providing nursing students with more hands-on nursing practice before they graduate and enter the field.

"Today's nursing workforce requires newly licensed nurses to graduate ready to practice in many different nursing specialties," said Nadeau. "The Eastern/HHC Center for Education, Simulation and Innovation will immerse Eastern nursing students in an actual hospital unit environment, equipping them with knowledge, skills, and confidence to enter the nursing workforce, feeling well prepared to begin their nursing career as safe, newly licensed nurses."