

BSc Nursing (Mental Health)
About this course
Mental health nursing is one of the most demanding and most rewarding nursing specialisms. It involves building therapeutic relationships with people experiencing conditions such as psychosis, depression, bipolar disorder, personality disorders, addiction, and eating disorders, providing care that is simultaneously clinical, relational, and ethical. Mental health nurses work across a wide range of settings, from acute inpatient wards and crisis teams to community mental health services, forensic units, and child and adolescent services, and the work requires both scientific knowledge and deep human sensitivity. At the University of Plymouth, this three-year full-time programme leads to professional registration as a mental health nurse, and it combines academic study with substantial practice placements in NHS and other healthcare settings. You will study the nursing profession, professional standards, and the evidence base for mental health nursing practice, developing an understanding of how research and clinical evidence inform the care you provide. The role of social media and digital health in contemporary nursing practice is part of the curriculum, reflecting the changing landscape in which nurses work. You will develop skills in risk assessment, therapeutic communication, pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions, and the legal and ethical frameworks that govern mental health care. Placement experience is central to the programme, giving you real clinical experience under supervision and the opportunity to develop your practice identity and professional judgement in a supported environment. Plymouth has strong NHS partnerships in the South West, and the placements you undertake will span different mental health settings and client groups. Registered mental health nurses are in consistent demand across the NHS and independent sector. Graduates work in inpatient and community settings, and many go on to specialist roles in forensic nursing, substance misuse services, eating disorder teams, or child and adolescent mental health services. Postgraduate study in advanced nursing practice, cognitive behavioural therapy, or leadership in healthcare is a common development pathway.
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