Optimising service users and carers involvement in nursing and social work pre-registration degrees

被引:4
|
作者
Odejimi, Opeyemi [1 ]
Lang, Linda [2 ]
Serrant, Laura [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wolverhampton, Fac Educ Hlth & Wellbeing, Wolverhampton, England
[2] Univ Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton, England
[3] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Manchester, Lancs, England
关键词
Service users and carers' involvement; Adult nursing; Social work; Pre-registration degree; Main stakeholders; Beneficial outcomes; Students; Academic staff; Optimise; EDUCATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.nedt.2021.105128
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The awareness of the contribution of service users and carers' involvement in nursing and social work preregistration degree education continues to grow. This study explored ways of optimising its beneficial outcomes to students, service users/carers and academic staff. A phenomenology qualitative approach was employed. The study sample was drawn from service users/carers involved in students' education, and adult nursing and social work degree students and academic staff. A total of 38 participants took part. Semi-structured interviews were used to gather views, which was then thematically analysed. This study identified factors that can optimise the beneficial outcomes of service users and carers' involvement to students, service users/carers and academic staff in Adult nursing and Social work pre-registration degree. The findings of this study support the value of service users' and carers' involvement in undergraduate nursing and social work education and offer strategies which support best practice, and optimise and sustain the efficacy and benefits of this approach in a higher education setting. An understanding of issues related to optimising service user and carer involvement may assist in the development of strategies that continue to make service users and carers' involvement in nursing and social work pre-registration degree effective and meaningful to students, service users/carers and academic staff.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Mental health content of comprehensive pre-registration nursing curricula in Australia
    McCann, Terence V.
    Moxham, Lorna
    Usher, Kim
    Crookes, Patrick A.
    Farrell, Gerald
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN NURSING, 2009, 14 (06) : 519 - 530
  • [43] Pre-registration in social psychology-A discussion and suggested template
    van 't Veer, Anna Elisabeth
    Giner-Sorolla, Roger
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 67 : 2 - 12
  • [44] Should service providers be paid for providing pre-registration clinical placements?
    Jones, ML
    Akehurst, R
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2000, 32 (02) : 432 - 436
  • [45] Pre-registration student research placements within KNOWBEST: a service evaluation
    Lowe, Catherine J. Minns
    Rose, Jack
    Roscoe, Susan
    Heneghan, Nicola
    PHYSIOTHERAPY, 2025, 126
  • [46] The teaching of physical assessment skills in pre-registration nursing programmes in Australia: Issues for nursing education
    Birks, Melanie
    James, Ainsley
    Chung, Catherine
    Cant, Robyn
    Davis, Jenny
    COLLEGIAN, 2014, 21 (03) : 245 - 253
  • [47] Facilitating Shared Online Group Learning between Carers, Service Users and Social Work Students
    Quinney, Lee
    Fowler, Peter
    SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION, 2013, 32 (08) : 1021 - 1031
  • [48] An integrative review of the literature on the teaching of the history of nursing in pre-registration adult nursing education in the UK
    Kelly, Jacinta
    Watson, Roger
    NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, 2015, 35 (02) : 360 - 365
  • [49] Are perceptions of disability changed by involving service users and carers in qualifying health and social work training?
    Unwin, Peter F.
    Rooney, Joy M.
    Osborne, Nina
    Cole, Charmaine
    DISABILITY & SOCIETY, 2017, 32 (09) : 1387 - 1399
  • [50] Pre-registration nursing students' perceptions and experiences of violence in a nursing education institution in South Africa
    de Villiers, Tania
    Mayers, Pat M.
    Khalil, Doris
    NURSE EDUCATION IN PRACTICE, 2014, 14 (06) : 666 - 673