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Nurse training over time – a guest blog by John Beales

by Jenny Crane

This is a guest blog kindly written for us by John Beales.  John is a former nurse, and worked in the NHS from 1983 until 2000.  He is now undertaking a Masters degree in History at the University of Bristol.

These two records of the presentation of certificates for the completion of nurse training and badges awarded upon qualification in 1961 and 1987 are separated by more than just time; they subtly reveal the changing nature of nurse training. At the Royal Northern Hospital in London, where my mother trained as a State Registered Nurse, in order to receive a certificate of training and the coveted hospital badge you had to complete a fourth year of ‘training’ by working as a staff nurse at the hospital for a year after qualifying.  The Chief Physician, Chief Surgeon, Hospital Chairman and the Matron signed her certificate of training.  When I qualified as a Registered General Nurse at University College Hospital in London in 1987 you received a hospital badge when you completed the 3 year training, and my certificate was signed by the Director of Nurse Education and the Chief Nurse Advisor; nursing having freed itself from the dominance of Medicine and having established specialist nurse tutor roles.  The signs of the changes are there in the absence of the Matron as the exemplar of authority within nurse training and their replacement with a Director of Nurse Education.  The differences are also there on the covers of the presentation booklets, the ‘University College Hospital School of Nursing’ being dually identified as the ‘Bloomsbury College of Nurse Education.’

But in reality the focus was still on training rather than education. Whilst changes in the role of nurses, the availability of sterile supplies, changes in service provision and technology meant that I did not have to cook patient’s breakfasts, perform the regular ward and theatre cleaning and manual cleaning and sterilising of equipment that were a feature of my mother’s training, my own training was still predominantly practical, focusing on ‘hands-on’ care and skills acquisition: blocks of shift-based clinical placements lasting roughly 8 weeks being interspersed with weeks of classroom teaching. As a student nurse you were part of the workforce, rather than being supernumerary, and I recall plenty of instances where students were left in charge of wards or other clinical areas, this being part of your ‘management training’, as well as a result of expediency if there were instances of staff sickness or errors in shift rota planning. However, my mother and I both recall that our training gave us realistic expectations of the nature and variety of nursing practice and fostered both an esprit de corp and an allegiance to our training hospital: the award, and wearing, of your training hospital badge when you qualified being something to be proud of.

 

 

Nursing degrees were rare when I qualified and the practice-based nature of nurse training meant that most courses lacked wider academic recognition. Change was inevitable due to both the need to ensure that nurses were prepared for the rapid pace of developments in care delivery and the desire for recognition as a profession. Project 2000, introduced in the 1990s, began the move from hospital to university based nurse education. Many commentators have gone on to bemoan this change, blaming it for a perceived loss of ‘compassion’ in nursing and the fostering of unrealistic career expectations. I think that both of these have been overstated. But, an area that seems to have been overlooked is the way in which hospital based training, and the award of your training hospital badge when you qualified fostered a sense of belonging amongst nurses in the NHS, and how that has been diminished since the move to University based education; clinical placements now normally taking place at a variety of different hospitals. In the absence of the award of qualification badges by universities, and a move away from the wearing of them due to concerns about infection control and patient safety, the most common place you find these badges now is on online auction sites. Now retired after a 48 year long career in the NHS my mother still has her training hospital badge. I left the NHS in 2000. Last year I sold mine on e-bay.

7 thoughts on “Nurse training over time – a guest blog by John Beales

  1. Thank you for the insight into the changes especially in nurse training. I too was of the old school and decry the downloading of junior medical roles onto the qualified nursing staff. Not that they are not capable but unfortunately the “nursing” duties are mostly carried out now by unqualified staff after a mere L&H and Fire Safety course. Cascade training is not safe. Maybe bring back the SEN to fill the yawning gap

    1. This is interesting, thank you! Would you be happy to share any more memories of your time in nurse training with us? We’d really like to hear more. If so, you could do this at peopleshistory.org/sharestory We hope to hear from you! Jenny

    2. I totally agree that the S.E N course should be brought back. I was a ward sister and they were a vital part of the team. Some of the changes are beneficial others are not.!!

  2. Hi John
    I trained at Bloomsbury College of Nurse Education & started in March 1987, the year you qualified. I was very thankful to train in such wonderful hospitals (both the Middlesex & University College Hospital).
    I enjoyed the style of training & do feel something has been lost with the current way of nurse training. However life moves on and patient care has become more complex.
    I have started a group on Facebook for anyone who has trained at BCNE, please do join. It’s small at the moment, but I’m hopeful.
    BW Fiona

  3. Hi Fiona, I have just read your post. I also trained at Bloomsbury, I was in March 1989 set, there are a few pictures of some of us on the Middlesex Hospital site. I would love to join your FB page please.

  4. I started my RN training in 1978 and we were the first set to incorporate Project 2000 training, so much earlier than ‘90s mentioned above. We were also the first to wear the rather nasty nylon based National uniform, which replaced the heavy cotton and apron version. Qualifying in 1982 we still received the GNC and Hospital badges. Very proud of those indeed. This was clearly still before graduate training started, which was around 1980 in my hospital.

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