Lusk B, Russell R L, Rodgers J, Wilson-Barnett J
Northern Illinois University, DeKalb 60115-2894, USA.
J Nurs Educ. 2001 May;40(5):197-202. doi: 10.3928/0148-4834-20010501-04.
The debate concerning nurses' diverse entry into practice was enlivened in 1995, when the American Nurses Association reaffirmed its contention that a baccalaureate degree was necessary for professional nursing practice. This debate may be informed by an appreciation of the educational routes taken by other countries that have changed from hospital-based to college-based nursing education. This paper describes and analyzes preregistration nursing education in Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States, from the late nineteenth century to the present. Nurses in Australia and New Zealand are currently educated entirely at the baccalaureate level. In the United Kingdom, nursing education is in the process of becoming completely university-based, resulting in a diploma or degree. In the United States, the majority of nurses graduate from two-year associate degree programs. This level of education, briefer than in the other countries described, potentially limits nurses' professional contributions.
1995年,美国护士协会重申其观点,即专业护理实践需要学士学位,这使得有关护士多元化入行途径的辩论更加激烈。了解其他国家从医院本位护理教育转变为学院本位护理教育所采取的教育路径,可能会为这场辩论提供参考。本文描述并分析了从19世纪末至今澳大利亚、新西兰、英国和美国的注册前护理教育情况。澳大利亚和新西兰的护士目前全部接受学士学位教育。在英国,护理教育正逐渐完全以大学为基础,最终获得文凭或学位。在美国,大多数护士毕业于两年制副学士学位课程。与所描述的其他国家相比,这种教育水平较短,可能会限制护士的专业贡献。