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BSc Nursing Studies (Registered Nurse Mental Health Nursing)
About this course
Mental health nursing is a vital branch of healthcare practice, focused on supporting people who are experiencing mental illness, psychological distress, or emotional crisis. Mental health nurses work across a wide range of settings, including inpatient wards, community teams, crisis services, forensic units, and primary care, building therapeutic relationships with individuals and helping them toward recovery. The role demands both clinical knowledge and deep human skills: empathy, communication, resilience, and the ability to hold complexity without becoming overwhelmed. At the University of Surrey, this three-year full-time programme prepares you for registration as a mental health nurse with the Nursing and Midwifery Council. You will develop a thorough understanding of mental health conditions, from common presentations such as depression and anxiety to more complex diagnoses including psychosis, personality disorders, and substance misuse. You will study pharmacology, psychological therapies, safeguarding, and the legal frameworks that govern mental health care, including the Mental Health Act. Throughout the programme, theory and practice are integrated: you will spend substantial time on clinical placements in real mental health settings, developing your assessment and intervention skills under supervision and building the professional judgement that qualified nursing requires. Surrey also integrates digital skills and an awareness of emerging technologies into the curriculum, equipping you to work in a healthcare environment that is increasingly shaped by digital tools and data-driven approaches. You will graduate with the knowledge, skills, and professional values needed to practise as a registered nurse in a demanding and deeply rewarding field. Mental health nursing graduates typically go on to work in NHS trusts, community mental health teams, voluntary sector organisations, and private healthcare providers. Specialisation in areas such as forensic mental health, eating disorders, child and adolescent mental health, or older adult services is a common career direction. Postgraduate study, including nurse prescribing, advanced practice qualifications, and clinical research pathways, is available for those who wish to extend their expertise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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