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  • Postgraduate training key for mental health nurses

    Author: Health Times

As funding of mental health programs increases, demand for skilled nurses will rise and as a result, there is an accelerating need for a skilled mental health workforce in Australia. However, developing an informed, flexible and skilled nursing workforce in hospital, community mental health and non-traditional settings is a challenge which needs to be addressed to meet the healthcare needs of Australians.

The critical ingredients appear to be a mix of supported practice, particularly in the transition from graduate nurse to specialist, relevant post-graduate education and clinical supervision. Nurses are at the coalface of mental health services; they form the largest occupational group who work in the sector. Nurses are employed in acute settings such as emergency departments in which people frequently present with mental health problems. Indeed in 2016, 276,954 presentations to emergency departments were classified as mental health related and the majority of presentations to general practitioners are thought to be related to mental health problems.

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In the same year, Australians had over 8.9 million contacts with community mental health workers, and 258,302 discharges from state mental health inpatient services. However, despite the pressing need for highly skilled nurses, the majority of nurses who work in mental health settings are not trained mental health nurses (MHNS) and it is widely recognised that nursing graduates are poorly equipped for working in the mental health field on graduation.

Since the loss of state registration and endorsement by nursing boards and councils, the only way to achieve recognition for mental health nurses is through the Australian College of Mental Health Nurses Credentialing program. To be eligible, registered nurses must have completed at least a post graduate diploma in the specialty and met further practice and supervision requirements. Increasingly, these credentials are required for advancement for nurses in the mental health field - and rightly so. The public deserve to receive mental health nursing services from appropriately skilled people.

As funding of mental health programs increases, demand for skilled nurses will rise.  In the 2019 Federal budget, the government provided $736.6 million for mental health and suicide prevention initiatives over seven years. Big measures include $373 million for additional services through headspace. Much of this funding will be channelled via the Primary Health Networks (PHN).

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Credentialed MHNs have been previously able to work in primary care settings under what was known as the Mental Health Nurse Incentive Program (MHNIP). MHNs working in the program were found to be able to deliver and adapt complex evidence based psychotherapies to people with the most complex mental health needs.  The funding for this program has now been devolved to the PHN ‘flexible funding pool’, which is charged with commissioning services not funded or accessible to people via the Medical Benefit Scheme (MBS). MHNs will be sought after and are in short supply, especially to address the needs of people with complex mental health needs.

In 2017, there were 22,159 nurses employed in the mental health workforce, compared to 3,369 psychiatrists and 26,311 psychologists (not all work in mental health), according to data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW).  The total number of nurses working in mental health jumped 48 per cent from 14,959 in 2007. Yet the AIHW, like much of the general public, is mistaken in calling these nurses MHNs. Whilst, there may be a higher number of eligible nurses, the number of Credentialed Mental Health Nurses in Australia stands at just 1166 .

MHNs require highly specialist skills and attitudes, including strong communication and interpersonal skills to communicate with patients and their families. MHNs require and have generally acquired the skills in psychotherapy and the capacity to form alliances and engage psychotherapeutically with people in extreme states of distress or with complex illness. Arguably, all nurses who work in mental health should have these skills but often fall short. As a consequence of MHNs being confused with nurses who work in mental health, the skill set of MHNs is often under-recognised and patients are excluded from accessing rebates for services by MHNs under Medicare as they might for accessing services from allied health professionals. It is imperative for the survival of the specialty for a greater percentage of the nursing workforce to be skilled and appropriately credentialed and recognised.

Postgraduate education is essential for nurses to meet the credentialing requirements to become MHNs.  An educated nursing workforce can also have benefits for service users, the service system and individual nurses. Nurses have a pivotal role in the leadership of health care organisations and postgraduate education can strengthen a nurse’s leadership and management skills so that they can positively influence workplace culture, translate the best available evidence into practice, and recognise and respond to ethical problems as they arise.

Educated, and expert nurses are needed to contribute to discussion and decisions about reform and change in mental health services. Postgraduate education can also unlock opportunities for employment in many specialist mental health roles such as consultation liaison, court liaison, early intervention, intensive treatment and recovery services, community case management, perinatal-mental health programmes and many as yet unimagined services.

In addition to opening up career opportunities by delivering specialist skills, postgraduate study can also increase nurses’ salary potential in a variety of professionally satisfying roles. A Deloitte Access Economics Report released last year revealed that workers with postgraduate qualifications in nursing occupations were earning an average of $95,391 in 2016-17. Ignoring demographics and experience, those nurses earned 45 per cent more than the average of nurses without post-graduate education.  This difference significantly affects an individual’s life-long remuneration. That is a very healthy payoff for pursuing further tertiary education.

Southern Cross University’s online Master of Mental Health will build nurses’ capabilities for challenging roles in the mental health sector.  Nurses will gain specialised theoretical knowledge and skills needed to respond to the many challenges of mental illness.  Candidates will be exposed to emerging trends in mental health care and learn from established leaders in the field. They will position themselves to provide the best possible mental health care to the rising number of Australians who need it.

Candidates will be able to complete the online degree at a time, place and pace that suits their situation. Students can access everything they need to complete their degrees, including course content, assignments and coursework, from home, the workplace or anywhere that has an internet connection. By gaining such credentials, mental health nurses will be advancing not only their own careers, but helping to drive better health outcomes.

About Dr Richard Lakeman

Dr Richard Lakeman is the course coordinator for the Master of Mental Health and Master of Mental Health Nursing programs, and a Senior Lecturer at Southern Cross University’s Internationally recognised School of Health and Human Sciences. He has 30 years’ experience working in the mental health field as a mental health nurse, psychotherapist, researcher and teacher in New Zealand, Ireland and Australia. Clinically he has focused on working with people with complex mental health needs. He has wide-ranging research interests in mental health and has published extensively on a range of topics including vicarious trauma, suicide, mental health recovery, hearing voices and other extraordinary experience and has a particular interest in psychotherapy for people with complex needs.

1 Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.  Mental health services in Australia: in brief 2018
2 Lakeman, R. (2013). Mental health nurses in primary care: Qualitative outcomes of the Mental Health Nurse Incentive Program. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 22(5), 391-398.
3 https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/mental-health-services/mental-health-services-in-australia/report-contents/mental-health-workforce
4 Personal Communication with the ACMHN on the 9/10/2019
5 http://www.acmhn.org/about-us/about-mh-nursing

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