Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Does the practice of care planning live up to the theory for mental health nursing students?

Rylance, R; Graham, P

Authors

R Rylance

P Graham



Abstract

Care planning should be a collaboration between the service user, caregivers and the relevant professionals. It is based on recovery principles, where clients identify their goals and how to work to reach them, rather than concentrating on illness, symptoms and problems. Mental health nursing students were taught the theory but observed that, in their clinical placements, this approach was often not followed in practice.

These issues were explored in two teaching sessions with six students. Subsequent focus groups were recorded, transcribed and analysed, yielding four main themes: care planning custom and practice, collaboration, organisational culture and student assumptions about their mentors. Participants detailed how care planning might not be person-centred in practice. It was suggested that this might be due to clinical customs, strains and restrictions, lack of collaboration between service users and the multidisciplinary team, and inept organisational culture. The main challenge for services has been how to manage risk as well as the person-centred approach, and the ‘competing dilemmas associated with care-versus-control issues’.

Citation

Rylance, R., & Graham, P. (2014). Does the practice of care planning live up to the theory for mental health nursing students?. Mental Health Practice, 2(18), 30-36. https://doi.org/10.7748/mhp.18.2.30.e917

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 20, 2014
Publication Date Oct 9, 2014
Deposit Date Jan 5, 2017
Journal Mental Health Practice
Print ISSN 1465-8720
Publisher RCN Publishing
Volume 2
Issue 18
Pages 30-36
DOI https://doi.org/10.7748/mhp.18.2.30.e917
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.7748/mhp.18.2.30.e917


Downloadable Citations