Waikato Shares Improved Nursing Competency Process
Waikato to Share Improved Nursing Competency
Process
A combined Wintec - Waikato DHB study into
potential Improvements to the Registered Nursing Competency
Assessment Programme is to be “road-showed” nationally
and offshore.
The process to assess registered nurses
competencies who have been out of practice for five or more
years or more and for overseas registered nurses wishing to
practice in New Zealand.
Principal Researcher Michael Bland (-Waikato DHB, formally Associate Head of School, Wintec) said the inspiration for the collaborative study came out of informal conversations between Wintec and Waikato District Health Board staff and individuals involved with working with students in clinical practice about the Competency Assessment programme and Waikato District Health Board’s orientation programme designed to enable a smooth transition for Wintec students employment as Registered Nurses at Waikato DHB.
Bland said the two
organisations embarked on a research project to learn how
the programmes could be improved as well as how the
assessment dove-tailed with the Waikato DHBs Registered
Nurse orientation programme. Both of these programmes had
originally been developed in isolation, “this research
study allow us to consider the students needs from entry to
the Wintec programme through the Waikato DHB orientation
programme with the aim of improving this journey for the
student” Bland said.
“This is the first New
Zealand study into Competency Assessment programmes which
are required by the New Zealand Nursing Council. He said
Wintec’s Competency Assessment programme was designed for
new immigrants or those returning to nursing in the Waikato
seeking competency with New Zealand Nursing Council.
Another obvious benefit was collaborative research between
the organisations.” (Note: the other competency programmes
through NZ are similar and regulated by Nursing Council.
Significantly we looked at how these two programmes dovetail
together.
The study involved Wintec staff, students
including foreign nurses new to New Zealand and those
returning to nursing, practice instructors and managers, and
clinical nurse educators.
Bland said the value in
sharing this research with the other schools of nursing with
similar programmes has subsequently attracted the attention
of the Nurse Education in Tertiary Centre Group - a
national body of all Heads of Schools in the sector as well
as the New Zealand Nursing Council he said.
Bland
said criteria about the standard of English language skills
of students entering the programme were clear and are the
highest for all Wintec programmes.
“There will
always be some cultural difficulties that arise for students
and while language skills may be competent, as measured by
IELTS, there may sometimes be issues around comprehension,
as there can be with some local students, depending on their
academic backgrounds and capabilities.”
“We
have already seen discernable developments in the programme,
evidenced by the relationships with the key Wintec academic
staff and Waikato DHB. Additionally, as a result of the
study, information given to students around the programme,
expectations and assessment has been more explicit and
the process has been made clearer to assessors.
“New developments in the orientation
programme at the Waikato DHB are already being made,” he
said.
“The potential to share the research findings with academic colleagues, practitioners and managers is a valuable outcome from the study.”
The research team members propose a plan to 'roadshow' and disseminate the methodology and research outcomes to all other Tertiary Education Institutes (and the Nurse Education in the Tertiary Sector group), which provide a similar programme within New Zealand and will seek funding to present at to the two most significant International Nurse Education Conferences in the world. i.e., Europe and Australia.
ENDS