Title: an integrated approach to pre-registration student nurse education
1an integrated approachto pre-registration
student nurse education
- Clive Denny
- Mental Health Nurse
- Honorary Lecturer Mental Health Nursing
- Rebecca Ryder
- District Nurse
- Honorary Lecturer Adult Branch Nursing
2introduction
- who we are
- who we were
- what we were asked to do
- what we did
- what we are going to do today
3working philosophy
- to create educative and therapeutic
- relationships which facilitate the
- integration and application of the art and
- science of nursing, in the provision of nursing
- care that is evidence based, yet sensitive to the
- unique needs of every individual patient/client
- and carer.
4philosophical claims I
- individuals should not have to try to fit their
needs to service provision - service provision should fit with the unique
needs of individuals - health Social care should not comprise a maze
of fragmented and disparate provision - health and Social care services must be well
sign-posted, well mapped and should exist as a
connected, seamless continuum
5philosophical claims II
- all health and social care activity should
configure around the needs of patients - all learning activity associated with health and
social care should also configure around the
needs of patients
6collegiality
- an essential aspect of professional practice
that requires nurses to view their nurse peers as
collaborators in the care-giving process who are
valued and respected for their unique
contributions. (Stuart and Sundeen 1995)
7rationale
- Making a Difference (DOH 1999)
- Fitness for Practice (UKCC 1999)
- The NHS Plan (DOH 2000)
- Integrated Educational Pathway for
Pre-Registration Student Nurses (Denny Ryder
2000 unpublished) - Preparation of Mentors and Teachers (ENB/DOH
2001) - Placements in Focus (ENB/DOH 2001)
- Report on the Quality Pathways for
Pre-Registration Nursing Programmes (ENB 2001)
8scope of framework
- integrated care pathways
- health..ill-health continuum
- multifarious settings
- multiple agencies and individuals
- fitness for practice and purpose
- tradition
- embrace diversity, collaboration, and
integration
9the open moorland of learning practice
disciplinarity and ownership upheld by
educations tendency to validate and
support knowledge/practice fields
alternative perspective open moorland of
learning, without demarcations, barriers, and
ownership hence there are no obstructions
to learning and experience (Usher et al.,
1997)
10The Pyramid Model
Branch Specific-Year Three
Branch SpecificYear Two
Common Foundation Year
11uni-disciplinary approach
prison service
health visiting
macmillan nurse
assessors
students
12team centered approach
Macmillan Nurse
GP
Care Manager
Nurse Practitioner
Continence Specialist
13unleashing the sense of inquiry
- to free curiosity to permit individuals to go
charging off in new directions dictated by their
own interests to unleash the sense of inquiry
to open everything to questioning and
exploration to recognize that everything is in a
process of change (Rogers, 1983, p120).
14unleashing the sense of inquiry
- to free curiosity to permit individuals to go
charging off in new directions dictated by their
own interests to unleash the sense of inquiry
to open everything to questioning and
exploration to recognize that everything is in a
process of change (Rogers, 1983, p120).
15unleashing the sense of inquiry
to free curiosity to permit individuals to go
charging off in new directions dictated by their
own interests to unleash the sense of inquiry
to open everything to questioning and
exploration to recognise that everything is in a
process of change (Rogers, 1983, p120).
16integrating care pathways
17collaboration and integration
S/S
MHN
MW
HV
18concluding comments
- adult learning is as much about choice as it is
about responsibility and autonomy - nurse education is not vacuum packed, the
process and products of learning impact upon
mentors, teams, practice, and ultimately upon
patients and carers - the facilitation of practice experience should
comprise a live process of negotiation and
interaction
19concluding comments
- the IEP model encourages the view of health and
social care systems as seamless and collaborative
- composition of learning should occur around
individual patient need - the facilitation of practice experience requires
more in-depth investigation, investment and
support
20The Pyramid Model
PRIMARY CARE PRECEPTORSHIP PATHWAY now viewing
at Healthcare Trusts near you
Branch Specific-Year Three
Fit For Practice
Branch SpecificYear Two
Common Foundation Year