Fees and intakes
No open intake is listed yet. Submit an enquiry and the team can confirm intake availability.
Nurses perform a vital role in 21st Century healthcare, in both primary and secondary care settings, restoring and promoting health, supporting patients and their families, and profiling healthcare needs of communities. The University of Lincoln recognises the challenges facing current and future healthcare and nursing practice, offering three distinct nursing programmes specialising in adult, child, and mental health. Our student nurses played a key role during the Covid-19 pandemic. As well as supporting hospitals and vaccination centres across Lincolnshire, their help played an integral component to the success of the University's Test and Trace Centre. We're extremely proud of our students for their contribution and dedication. Our professionally accredited programmes enable you to become a registered nurse with the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC). The programmes aim to prepare students to become fit for practice in accordance with the NMC's Standards for Pre-registration Nursing Education and to be eligible to register as a qualified nurse. Students are encouraged to become confident, critically analytical advocates of excellence in nursing practice within their respective specialisms. In your first year, you can focus on building a solid base of knowledge by understanding human development across the life span, the role of the nurse in contemporary society, principles of person-centred care, and concepts around health and illness such as digital literacy, public health, inequalities in health, and health legislation and how these impact on individual and community health. In the second year, you are able to begin exploring what happens to health and wellbeing in the presence of disease, illness, or injury and interventions to help people recover from these illnesses.
No open intake is listed yet. Submit an enquiry and the team can confirm intake availability.