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Postgraduate Medical Journal 2004;80:706-710
© 2004 Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine


REVIEW

Healthcare reforms: implications for the education and training of acute and critical care nurses

S Glen

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Professor Sally Glen
St Bartholomew School of Nursing and Midwifery, 20 Bartholomew Close, London EC1A 7QN; s.glen{at}city.ac.uk

This paper offers a wide ranging analysis of the drivers that resulted in scrutiny of medical, nursing, and healthcare professional roles. It suggests that what is needed is a coherent vision of the future shape of the health workforce. This requires moving beyond the presumption that reforming working practices primarily involves "delegating doctors" responsibilities to nurses. The paper argues that it is self evident that the implications of changes in healthcare roles and the ability of existing professionals to function effectively in the future will require education, training, and human resource investment supportive of the changes. It suggests a clear definition of competence and a national standard to practice is essential for nurses working in acute and acute critical settings. There should therefore be a correlation between levels of practice, levels of education, and remuneration. Furthermore, education programmes for senior nurses should sit coherently alongside the education programmes required by Modernising Medical Careers. Finally, the realisation of the government’s service and modernisation agenda will require a culture change within higher education institutions, postgraduate deaneries, professional organisations, workforce development confederations, and NHS trusts.


Keywords: healthcare reforms; nurses’ training; acute care; critical care




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