Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University & School of Nursing and Midwifery, Edith Cowan University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Int J Ment Health Nurs. 2024 Feb;33(1):93-103. doi: 10.1111/inm.13226. Epub 2023 Sep 13.
Inadequate mental health nursing content in pre-registration nursing curricula has been the topic of debate and concern since the introduction of comprehensive nursing education in Australia. Government-initiated inquiries and the efforts of mental health professional organizations and leaders have not successfully addressed this problem. The aim of the current study was to garner the perspectives and experiences of mental health nurse academics regarding the adequacy of mental health content in producing graduates able to work effectively in mental health settings and identify barriers and enablers to implementing and sustaining sufficient mental health content in pre-registration programs. A survey was distributed to mental health academics in Australian universities offering pre-registration nursing degrees. In total, 44 complete responses were included in the analysis. The results demonstrated the following: Most participants considered the current mental health content, theory and clinical hours insufficient to prepare graduates for practice in mental health settings. They reported a scarcity of tenured mental health nurse academics to deliver content effectively. Most participants were dissatisfied with the comprehensive approach to nurse education and preferred a double degree (nursing and mental health nursing), or a direct entry mental health nursing program. These findings provide further evidence for the current crisis in mental health nursing education and highlight the need for urgent action. People accessing health services have the right to receive high-quality care from appropriately qualified nurses. The inadequacy of mental health content in these programs effectively denies vulnerable people the standard of care and treatment they should be entitled to.
自澳大利亚全面推行护理教育以来,注册前护理课程中心理健康护理内容不足一直是人们争论和关注的话题。政府发起的调查以及心理健康专业组织和领导者的努力并未成功解决这一问题。本研究旨在了解心理健康护士学者对在心理健康环境中培养能够有效工作的毕业生的心理健康内容的充足程度的看法和经验,并确定在注册前课程中实施和维持充足的心理健康内容的障碍和促进因素。一项调查分发给澳大利亚提供注册前护理学位的大学的心理健康护士学者。共有 44 名完整回复者被纳入分析。结果表明:大多数参与者认为目前的心理健康内容、理论和临床时间不足以使毕业生为在心理健康环境中工作做好准备。他们报告说,有任期的心理健康护士学者人数不足,无法有效地提供内容。大多数参与者对护士教育的综合方法不满意,他们更喜欢双学位(护理和心理健康护理)或直接进入心理健康护理计划。这些发现为心理健康护理教育的当前危机提供了进一步的证据,并强调需要采取紧急行动。使用卫生服务的人有权接受高素质护士的高质量护理。这些项目中心理健康内容的不足实际上剥夺了弱势群体应享有的护理和治疗标准。