

BSc Nursing - Mental Health with Foundation Year (January intake)
About this course
Mental health nursing is one of the most important and challenging areas of nursing practice, concerned with the care and support of people experiencing mental illness, psychological distress, and complex emotional difficulties. Mental health nurses work across inpatient and community settings, from acute psychiatric wards to community mental health teams, crisis services, forensic settings, and primary care, building therapeutic relationships with people whose experiences may include psychosis, severe depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, personality disorders, and addiction. The role requires both clinical knowledge and exceptional interpersonal skills, and the therapeutic relationship between nurse and patient is often central to recovery. At Birmingham City University, this four-year programme includes a foundation year that provides the academic and contextual preparation needed to enter the nursing degree proper, making the programme accessible to students who may not have the traditional qualifications for direct entry. The programme leads to registration as a mental health nurse with the Nursing and Midwifery Council and incorporates substantial clinical placements across a range of mental health settings throughout the degree, giving you the experience of working with real patients under supervised clinical conditions. Birmingham's location in one of the UK's major urban areas provides access to a diverse range of placement settings and patient populations. Registered mental health nurses are employed across NHS mental health trusts, independent sector providers, local authorities, and the charitable sector. Community mental health teams, assertive outreach services, crisis resolution and home treatment teams, forensic services, and child and adolescent mental health services are among the many settings where mental health nurses work. There is sustained demand for mental health nurses across the UK, and newly qualified nurses are actively recruited. Career progression leads to specialist clinical roles, nurse consultancy, advanced practice, management, and education, and further study at postgraduate level supports those who wish to advance to senior clinical or leadership positions.
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