| Literature DB >> 29847011 |
Pras Ramluggun1, Mary Lacy1, Martha Cadle1, Mahmood Anjoyeb2.
Abstract
An increasing number of students with a pre-existing mental health condition are enrolling on preregistration mental health nursing programmes. The challenges faced by these students in managing the demands of the programme have not been fully explored. Mental health and well-being is an integral part of providing a healthy university in which students can flourish. The purpose of the study was to explore how students with an underlying mental health issue manage the demands of the mental health nursing programme. The outcomes of the study are aimed at informing inclusive teaching and learning and current student support provision. Ethics approval was given. Students from two universities in South East England who met the criterion of having a pre-existing mental health condition when enrolling on the mental health preregistration nursing programme were invited to take part. Nine students took part in the study. Using an interpretative descriptive design, 1:1 face-to-face, audio-taped, semistructured interviews were undertaken. The data were analysed using a framework approach, and this revealed four main themes: timing of disclosure; managing lived experience in learning environments; students' coping mechanisms, and experience of support. Recommendations for practice was that approved education institutes (AEIs) should ensure they have a robust, inclusive practice by implementing strategies to develop these students' resilience, and enhance their learning and the current support provisions. This will ensure the barriers to disclosing their mental health conditions are recognized and minimized to enable these students to fully contribute to their own learning and teaching experience.Keywords: mental health nursing students; mental health nursing training; mental health stigma in education; nursing students’ disclosure of mental illness; nursing students’ mental health support; students with lived experience of mental illness
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29847011 DOI: 10.1111/inm.12486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Nurs ISSN: 1445-8330 Impact factor: 3.503