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Opportunity lost?: The major in mental health nursing in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Brenda Happell, Margaret McallisterMargaret Mcallister, Cadeyrn Gaskin
Background The ongoing difficulty in educating and sustaining an adequate nursing workforce in mental health settings has been identified throughout the world. Different strategies have been implemented internationally to deal with this situation. In Australia major streams in mental health nursing were introduced in some Australian universities to promote mental health nursing as a viable career choice for nursing students. Fourteen universities had implemented or planned to implement a major stream in mental health nursing. From a survey of these programs a lack of consistency in the structure and content of programs was evident. For most programs the intakes had been relatively small, although retention rates appeared promising. Objectives To determine the extent majors in mental health nursing introduced in Australia have been sustained since their implementation. Design Cross-sectional design. A survey instrument used in 2010 was readministered in 2013. Setting Schools of Nursing in Australia where a major in mental health nursing had been implemented or planned. Participants Subject and program coordinators. Methods The survey was administered via email. Results Of the 14 majors in mental health nursing originally proposed or implemented, only five were remaining, three had never commenced the program despite plans to do so and six programs once operating had now ceased. Numbers of students undertaking the program have tended to be small. Few modification changes in the structure and content in the majors since initial implementation were reported.Conclusions The findings suggest that the major in mental health nursing has not been a successful or sustainable strategy, and therefore is unlikely to contribute positively to strengthening the mental health nursing workforce. The availability of sufficient graduate nurses with the interest and skills to pursue a career in mental health nursing is becoming urgent. The adequate resourcing of strategies to address this issue needs to be considered as a matter of priority.

History

Volume

34

Issue

6

Start Page

13

End Page

17

Number of Pages

5

eISSN

1532-2793

ISSN

0260-6917

Location

United Kingdom

Publisher

Churchill Livingstone

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Nurse education today.

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