About the course
Reasons to study
- Regulated by the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), this course could open doors to a potentially life-enriching career.
- To prepare you to pursue a mental health nursing career, you’ll practice and develop your skills through clinical placements in a range of statutory, private, and voluntary services.
- Digital technologies offer the opportunity to study to become a nurse in a way that offers some flexibility to fit around life commitments, while gaining practical, hands-on experience.
Mental Health nursing involves working with people, their families, carers, and communities – all of whom may experience the impact of mental illness. This includes people with formal diagnoses, such as psychosis, bipolar disorder, anxiety, depression, and personality disorders, as well as those who do not accept or recognise these diagnostic labels.
If you would like to become a Mental Health nurse and are in the North East, Yorkshire and the Humber, Cheshire and Merseyside, North West, Cumbria or North Lincolnshire, this course is for you. If you are outside these areas, please visit Health Education England for more information.
Our Nursing (Blended Learning) Mental Health BSc(Hons) course has been designed to help you become a confident, competent, and compassionate nurse, with our team supporting you to develop the intellectual, personal, and professional skills you need.
Why study Nursing (Blended Learning) Mental Health BSc(Hons)
This blended learning mental health degree allows you to learn using mainly digital technologies, offering a flexible way to study. You’ll benefit from hands-on experience, and you’ll attend campus for a maximum total of 20 days per year of the course. This gives you the chance to develop and practise skills in a safe and controlled environment, attend occupational health sessions and mandatory training.
You’ll also undertake practice placements across the NHS and healthcare organisations in a setting close to home. You’ll be supported in your practice placement through the allocation of practice supervisors, practice assessors and academic assessors.
You'll be taught by a team who understand what it is like be a Mental Health nurse, and learning and teaching will be delivered online through synchronous and asynchronous seminars, and via group work, simulation, and practical skills experience.
You can also borrow a clinical skills kit to familiarise yourself with fundamental equipment you may use in practice, and become part of an online community, to showcase your work and interact with peers and tutors. You’ll also learn through independent, self-directed study, developing confidence in your self-discipline and organisational skills.
In 2024, the University’s new Daphne Steele Building will open on the site of the National Health Innovation campus, too, allowing you to learn from specialist clinical teaching facilities and world-leading research facilities.
After successfully graduating, you’ll be eligible to apply for registration with the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) and work as a Registered Nurse in Mental Health.
Students studying this course may be eligible to receive a non-repayable grant of at least £5,000 each year. Further information is available on the NHS Learning Support Fund Website.
Not quite ready to start Nursing (Blended Learning) Mental Health BSc(Hons)? Successful completion of our Health Foundation Pathway leading to a BSc(Hons) Degree will equip you with the foundation knowledge to study Mental Health Nursing.
