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Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 84-90 (February 2004)

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The origins of current nurse education policy and its implications for nurse educators

Gerard Kennyemail address

Accepted 16 September 2003.

Abstract 

The publication of Fitness for Practice [UKCC Commission for Nursing and Midwifery Education, 1999. Fitness for Practice (Chair Sir Leonard Peach). UKCC, London] in the United Kingdom (UK) came at a time when anxiety was being expressed by UK government and the National Health Service (NHS) over the suitability of newly trained nurses to be ‘fit for purpose’. There had been growing disquiet that the education reforms of the 1990s, which had seen nurse education move into higher education, had failed to deliver skilled nurses for the modern healthcare system. Fitness for Practice (loc. cit.) became the driving force behind government’s attempts to bring about change nurse education policy. In the process of these reforms, nurse educators were marginalised and portrayed a negative light. The implementation time of the report was one to two years. This makes the policy ripe for discussion and analysis to explore the complexity of its recommendations, and its implications for UK nurse educators within a higher education context.

School of Maternal and Child Health, Glenside Campus, University of the West of England, Bristol BS16 1DD, UK

PII: S0260-6917(03)00135-7

doi:10.1016/j.nedt.2003.09.001

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