On completion of this course graduates will be eligible to apply for registration by the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia (NMBA) for Australian Health Practitioners Regulation Agency (AHPRA). Please note: from 1 July 2010 practitioners applying for registration as a nurse or midwife for the first time in Australia are required to demonstrate English language proficiency as specified by the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia (NMBA). These requirements include: a) the IELTS examination (academic module) with a minimum score of 7 in each of the four components (listening, reading, writing and speaking); or b) completion and an overall pass in the Occupational English Test (OET) with grades A or B only in each of the four components. For further details, refer to the NMBA website. Http://www.nursingmidwiferyboard.gov.au/Registration-Standards.aspx
Students may apply for admission to the course through the Universities Admission Centre (UAC) or as a Year 1 Bachelor of Nursing student with GPA greater than 5.5. However, this should only be done following discussion with and the approval of the Head of Program.
Applications from Australian and New Zealand citizens and holders of permanent resident visas must be made via the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC).
Applicants who have undertaken studies overseas may have to provide proof of proficiency in English. Local and International applicants who are applying through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) will find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on the UAC website. Local applicants applying directly to UWS should also use the information provided on the UAC website.
International applicants must apply directly to the University of Western Sydney via UWS International.
International students applying to UWS through UWS International can find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on the UWS International website.
http://pubsites.uws.edu.au/international/
Overseas qualifications must be deemed by the Australian Education International - National Office of Overseas Skills Recognition (AEI-NOOSR) to be equivalent to Australian qualifications in order to be considered by UAC and UWS.
Qualification for this award requires the successful completion of 240 credit points including the units listed in the recommended sequence below.
Nursing for Health and Wellbeing
This unit introduces the student to nursing concepts, principles and skills that identify, promote, maintain and support health and wellbeing across the lifespan.
This unit introduces the student to concepts and mechanisms involved in normal body functions and the maintenance of normal activities of living that inform professional nursing practice.
Behavioural Foundations of Nursing Practice
This unit introduces the student to psycho-social concepts and principles that underpin human behaviour and inform professional nursing practice.
This unit introduces the student to the basic constructs that form professional nursing and nursing practice.
This unit introduces students to professional nursing concepts and practices that promote, maintain and support people who are affected by health breakdown.
Introduction to Health Breakdown
This unit introduces students to the concepts and mechanisms of health breakdown and their application to professional nursing practice.
Nursing and Healthy Communities
This unit introduces the student to psychosocial concepts and principles that promote and sustain the health of communities and informs professional nursing practice.
This unit introduces students to further constructs that inform professional nursing and nursing practice related to health breakdown.
This unit will elaborate on professional nursing concepts and practices that promote, maintain and support people who are experiencing health breakdown affecting eating, drinking, nutrition and elimination.
Alterations in Nutrition, Elimination and Sexuality
This unit will elaborate the mechanisms of health breakdown and their application to professional nursing practice in supporting people who are affected by alteration in eating, drinking, nutrition, elimination and sexuality.
Evidence-Based Nursing 1 (Advanced)
This unit explores concepts related to Evidence-Based Nursing which will further develop student understanding of the significance of scholarship, research and the research processes and how these may inform professional nursing knowledge and practice.
Family Health Care:Health Issues and Australian Indigenous People (Advanced)
This unit provides the student with opportunities to investigate and discuss health issues as they relate to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, the term Indigenous Australians is preferred by government bodies, both will be used in this unit. A compulsory 40 hour indigenous health clinical placement will be booked for you to transform the theoretical knowledge gained into clinical practice.
Medical Surgical Nursing 2 (Advanced)
This unit will elaborate on professional nursing concepts and practices that promote maintain and support people who are experiencing health breakdown affecting breathing, work/leisure, sexuality and mobility. This unit will enable the student to undertake an advanced health assessment and develop advanced clinical reasoning and decision making skills to link theory and practice.
Alterations in Breathing, Work/Leisure and Mobility
This unit will elaborate the mechanisms of health breakdown and their application to professional nursing practice in supporting people who are affected by alteration in breathing, work/leisure, sexuality and mobility.
This unit will extend the students understanding of the relationships between stress, adaptation, mental health and the person's capacity to function in everyday life and the implications for professional nursing practice
Family Health Care: Child and Adolescent Nursing
This unit explores physical, social, political and community issues which impact on the health of children, adolescents and families. The knowledge gained will be appropriate for working with children and families within a hospital or community setting. The promotion of health and prevention of illness underpins this unit.
Family Health Care: High Acuity Nursing
This unit will elaborate and consolidate mechanisms of health breakdown and complex nursing concepts and professional nursing practices that promote, maintain and support health and wellness. The focus is on providing professional nursing care of people who are experiencing acute, profound physiological, psychosocial and spiritual health breakdown.
This unit will elaborate the mechanisms of health breakdown and their application to professional nursing practice in supporting people who are affected by serious mental health breakdown.
Family Health Care:Chronicity and Palliative Care Nursing (Advanced)
This unit engages students in advanced assessment, planning, implementation and evaluation of professional nursing care for those individuals and their families living with a chronic illness and those dying from a life threatening illness. The unit will enable the student to collaboratively work with medical students to apply nursing skills and critical thinking skills to the challenges of patients with chronic and life threatening illnesses. The unit will enable the student to undertake an advanced health assessment , apply critical thinking skills in nursing practice and to understand the impact of chronic and life threatening illness on the nurse, client and their family.
One elective
Transition to Graduate Practice
This unit explores the transition to graduate practice from undergraduate nursing student to graduate professional registered nurse focusing on the role, responsibilities, accountabilities and options for the registered nurse.
Evidence-Based Nursing 2 (Advanced)
This unit consolidates and assists students synthesis of the major methodological approaches to support evidence-based practice, the process of research/inquiry, and their application in the development of a defensible and justifiable nursing research project.
Family Health Care: Older Adult Nursing
The health and wellbeing of older people reflect their genetic inheritance, the environment, lifestyle choices and a complex set of developmental experiences upon which individuals, groups and socio-political influences have impinged. Nevertheless, being or becoming old is only one part of a persons life experience. Thus, in order to understand being old, we need to have knowledge of such influences and experiences. By promoting the health and therefore the potential of people, nurses have the opportunity to be in the forefront of health care. This opportunity places nurses in a position to intervene therapeutically in the lives and upon the lifestyles of older people by working with individuals and groups to facilitate healthy ageing and by promoting positive attitudes towards ageing and older people.
Leadership in Graduate Practice (Advanced)
This unit introduces the student to the role of the professional nurse as leader and manager. The unit provides opportunities to explore the role of the nurse as leader and manager of a team alongside medical students. The student will be provided with an opportunity to participate in a mentored relationship with appropriate School and College staff.
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