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BSc Mental Health Nursing
About this course
Mental health nursing is one of the most demanding and meaningful professions within healthcare. It involves working with people experiencing the full range of mental health conditions, from anxiety and depression to psychosis and personality disorders, and supporting them through periods of acute crisis as well as longer-term recovery. Mental health nurses are advocates, listeners, care coordinators, and clinical practitioners, working across inpatient wards, community teams, crisis services, and specialist settings. At University College Birmingham, you will study this three-year, full-time programme and graduate as a registered mental health nurse, qualified to practise in the NHS and independent sector. The degree combines academic study with substantial clinical placements, so you will spend significant time in real healthcare environments throughout your training rather than encountering practice only at the end. Academic content covers the biological, psychological, and social dimensions of mental health and illness, giving you a rounded understanding of why people experience mental distress and what helps. You will study therapeutic communication, risk assessment, pharmacology, the legal and ethical frameworks that govern mental health care, and evidence-based approaches to treatment and recovery. Alongside clinical skills, the programme develops your capacity for reflective practice, helping you to learn continuously from your experience and to understand your own responses to the emotional demands of the work. A typical entry tariff of 120 UCAS points provides a clear indication of entry expectations. The values that underpin mental health nursing, compassion, respect, a commitment to person-centred care, and an understanding that recovery is possible, run throughout the programme and shape how you will approach practice. Registered mental health nurses work across the NHS, voluntary organisations, and private healthcare. Specialist pathways include working with children and young people, older adults, forensic populations, and those with co-occurring substance use difficulties. Many nurses progress to advanced clinical roles, management, education, or research. The degree also provides a foundation for postgraduate study in areas such as cognitive behavioural therapy, leadership, and specialist nursing practice.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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