- 05 June 2023
- 6 min read
How Staff Shortages Have Affected Student Nurses’ Learning & Placement Experience
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Staffing shortages are a hot topic within the community. Student Mental Health Nurse Angelica talks candidly about the effects current levels have had on her learning and placement experience.
As we all know, staffing levels in general nursing and mental health have been an ongoing issue for years. My own experience as a Student Mental Health Nurse has shown that staff shortages negatively impacted my nursing degree progress.
Staff Shortages In Psychiatric Settings
Nearly a third of nursing vacancies in England are for Mental Health Nurses, resulting in overstretched services that struggle to deliver timely care. Additionally, COVID 19 has affected people's mental wellbeing, and people are increasingly aware of mental health and the importance of seeking help (which is excellent).
According to a BMA report published in 2022, since 2016 there has been a 21% increase in the number of people in need of mental health services (1.4 million vs 1.1 million in 2016).
What Could Be Causing This?
Nursing staff shortages in psychiatric settings are primarily caused by nurses' disinterest in working there. In addition to personal factors, social and organisational factors contribute to lack of interest in working in psychiatric settings.
Mental health is still stigmatized, and many people hold the outdated view that nurses abuse patients, as they did when asylums were open.
The shortage of staff has affected patient’s access to therapeutic care, resulting in a reduction in ward activities and a lack of patient involvement in care decisions. Staff can experience stress, pressure, heavy workload, lack of support and burnout. It is more important than ever to retain nurses due to the current nursing shortage, as burnout impacts their job satisfaction.
About this contributor
Student Mental Health Nurse
I am a student mental health nurse who has a passion for community nursing. I’ve had many years of experience working in various, different mental health fields but i have now found my feet working in the community. I’ve known since i was little that i was always going to be in a caring role and then I accidentally fell into mental health nursing and i would never go back! It has my heart.
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Log In Subscribe to commentSuzanne Loveridge
Suzanne Loveridge
one year agoWhat seems like a lifetime ago nurses were paid to train. They learned from the day they first stepped into ... read more
What seems like a lifetime ago nurses were paid to train. They learned from the day they first stepped into PTS and on the wards. Staffing was not always perfect but the basics learned at the bedside. Peer learning and teaching a natural progression preparing students to teach a new generation. Something that is missing today when you might only have one student allocated. Each period in class prepared us for our next placement. Todays students learning seems chaotic. I cannot even expect a 3rd year to have some of the basic skills I had at the end of my first year. There was a structure then that is completely absent today. Then there is the financial burden I never had and no wonder nursing students leave to use a degree elsewhere. Barely enough stay long enough to gain skills to teach the next generation. Until nurse training finds an old school structure and reintroduces pay to train with an emphasis on skills alongside learning, the spiral down will continue. Thirty years ago I would have encouraged my children into healthcare. It’s the last place I’d suggest they work today. It’s sad because I loved my 45 years as a nurse. I don’t see that enthusiasm anymore.
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Matt Farrah
Matt Farrah
one year agoAngelica, this is a brilliant piece of writing. Stylistically, it's a wonderful read (simple and clear). In terms of what ... read more
Angelica, this is a brilliant piece of writing. Stylistically, it's a wonderful read (simple and clear). In terms of what it is saying, it still shocks and surprises me. And I've been writing about the staffing crisis for years - it still shocks me that too little is being done to fix this. The outcome of that is poor patient care and people who go to work in a job that is not sustainable (emotionally or physically).
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