

BSc Nursing (Registered Nurse - Mental Health)
About this course
Mental health nursing is a health profession dedicated to supporting people experiencing mental distress, mental illness, and the complex challenges that can arise from conditions affecting mood, thought, perception, and behaviour. Mental health nurses work in partnership with individuals, their families, carers, and communities, building therapeutic relationships that support recovery, promote wellbeing, and help people to live the lives they choose. The role is both clinically demanding and deeply relational, requiring a combination of psychological understanding, communication skill, and professional judgement. At the University of Lincoln, this three-year full-time programme leads to registration as a mental health nurse with the Nursing and Midwifery Council, the professional regulator for nursing in the UK. The programme is built around a combination of academic study and substantial clinical placement, giving you both the theoretical grounding in mental health and the practical competence that professional nursing requires. You will study mental health conditions and their evidence base, pharmacology and medicines management, therapeutic communication, mental health law and ethics, and the social determinants of mental health across the lifespan. Clinical placements are integrated throughout the programme, placing you in inpatient, community, crisis, and specialist mental health settings where you develop your skills under the supervision of qualified nurses. A typical entry tariff of 120 points reflects the university's commitment to widening access to nursing while maintaining the professional standards required for registration. Lincoln is a teaching-focused university with strong NHS relationships in the East Midlands, and the programme benefits from good clinical placement networks. Graduates register with the NMC and work in NHS and independent mental health services, community mental health teams, crisis teams, and an increasingly diverse range of specialist roles. The profession offers clear pathways for advancement, and many mental health nurses go on to specialise, take advanced practitioner roles, or move into leadership and education.
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