

BSc Nursing - Mental Health with Foundation Year (September intake)
About this course
Mental health nursing is a branch of nursing devoted to supporting people experiencing mental health difficulties, from acute crises requiring inpatient care to long-term conditions managed in the community. It is a profession built on therapeutic relationships, requiring the ability to engage with people who may be in considerable distress, to communicate with empathy and clarity, and to make careful clinical assessments that balance risk, autonomy, and the right to recovery. Mental health nurses are the most numerous mental health professionals in the NHS, working across hospitals, community teams, crisis services, forensic units, and many other settings. At Birmingham City University, this four-year programme includes a foundation year that builds the academic and contextual knowledge needed before you enter the main nursing degree. The nursing programme itself leads to registration with the Nursing and Midwifery Council as a mental health nurse, a regulated professional qualification that allows you to practise across the UK. Across the programme, you will study the biological, psychological, and social dimensions of mental health and illness, develop your understanding of the legal and ethical framework within which mental health care is delivered, and build the clinical skills needed to assess and care for people with a range of mental health needs. Practice placements are a major component of the degree, giving you supervised experience in inpatient, community, and specialist settings. Mental health nursing graduates are in consistent demand across the NHS and the independent sector. Community mental health teams, crisis resolution services, assertive outreach, forensic and secure units, child and adolescent mental health services, and inpatient wards all provide employment opportunities. With experience and further qualifications, mental health nurses can progress to nurse consultant, advanced nurse practitioner, or clinical specialist roles, or move into management, education, or research. The profession offers a demanding but rewarding career, and demand for qualified mental health nurses in the UK is expected to remain strong given the growing recognition of mental health as a public health priority.
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