Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies)
Full-time study patterns for the Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies)
Unit of study tables Year 1 and Year 2
Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies)
HSBH3001 Health and Indigenous Populations
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1,Semester 2 Classes: 1x2-hr lecture/week, 1x1-hr tutorial/week. Prerequisites: (HSBH1006, HSBH1007, HSBH1008 and HSBH1009) or (NURS1003) Assessment: On line quizzes (4x10%), report 1 500wd (30%), on line discussion 1500wd (30%). Campus: Camperdown/Darlington Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Health Sciences
This unit of study aims to discuss the complexities of Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander health, from the various health policies that have influenced the health and well-being of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to the current trends that continue to impact on their health. It will explore how these issues, pertaining to Australia`s Indigenous people`s health, have become a national agenda as Australia attempts to find the appropriate approach and the right model of care to improve all avenues of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people`s health today.
NURS1001 Health and Human Biology
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: lectures 13x2hours and workshops 8x2hours Assessment: on-line test (20%), human biology workbook site visit (30%) and written examination (50%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study is designed to provide students with an introductory level understanding of the concepts related to human anatomy and physiology. The unit will focus on the major body organ systems and the interrelationship between these systems. The integration of the body organ systems will provide a basis to explore processes fundamental to health, including oxygenation, metabolism, elimination, movement, neuro-endocrine regulation, protection, and reproduction.
The key physiological processes of each body organ system will be explored using the principle of homeostasis to develop a beginner's level understanding of compensatory mechanisms that may occur during alterations of physiological function and illness. This will provide students with a foundational basis with which to understand more complex physiological alterations and pathophysiology later in the degree.
The key physiological processes of each body organ system will be explored using the principle of homeostasis to develop a beginner's level understanding of compensatory mechanisms that may occur during alterations of physiological function and illness. This will provide students with a foundational basis with which to understand more complex physiological alterations and pathophysiology later in the degree.
NURS1002 Health Assessment
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2hr lectures, 6x2hr tutorials, 12x2hr labs, clinical placements Assessment: online activities (15%), written exam (50%), on-campus clinical practice package e-portfolio (25%), on-campus clinical performance appraisal/video assessment (10%) and off-campus clinical placement Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
Health assessment of individuals, families and groups is the foundation of accurate nursing judgements, and is a process that occurs with each nurse-patient encounter. It represents the first step of the practice thinking framework which will be introduced in this unit of study. The student will be introduced to the theoretical and practice aspects of health assessment and how assessment assists in making clinical judgements that form the basis for planning, implementing and evaluating nursing care. Processes to collect physiological, psychosocial, developmental, sociocultural and spiritual data, in both objective and subjective forms will be discussed and students' skills in the use of health assessment tools developed.
NURS1003 Population Health to Personal Healthcare
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2hr lectures, 7x2hr tutorials Assessment: statistical report (40%), group presentation (20%) and examination (40%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
The student will gain an understanding of environmental, biological and socioeconomic determinants of the health and wellbeing of populations. The students' understanding of these determinants will be facilitated by an introduction to epidemiology and its role and function in relation to the new public health. Students will critically reflect on population health data that identifies issues of access, social inclusion and equity within Australian society. A detailed analysis of population behaviours and the determinants that can have an impact on their behaviours, health and wellbeing will be undertaken during the unit of study. Public health helps to establish need and assists in analyses of the impact of health
interventions. As such, epidemiological data provides a major resource to guide evidence-based practice. How epidemiological data provides public health analysts with an evidence base to explain population level health, and healthcare ractitioners with knowledge that can inform the care provided at a personal level, will be discussed. Students will also gain insight into the challenges that face practitioners who need to translate population health information into appropriate individualised healthcare plans. Students will explore the co-relationships between public health, primary care, primary healthcare, health promotion and ultimately personal healthcare.
interventions. As such, epidemiological data provides a major resource to guide evidence-based practice. How epidemiological data provides public health analysts with an evidence base to explain population level health, and healthcare ractitioners with knowledge that can inform the care provided at a personal level, will be discussed. Students will also gain insight into the challenges that face practitioners who need to translate population health information into appropriate individualised healthcare plans. Students will explore the co-relationships between public health, primary care, primary healthcare, health promotion and ultimately personal healthcare.
NURS1004 Nursing Knowledge, Practice and Policy
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2hr lectures, 5x2hr tutorials and 4x2hr labs Assessment: online activity (10%), essay/report/poster (30%), written examination (50%) and clinical practice appraisal (10%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit explores the discipline of nursing from historical, philosophical, theoretical and contemporary perspectives. It aims to cultivate knowing and mindful action in nursing practice by introducing students to the Framework for Practice Thinking and person-centred nursing. The unit of study will also provide students with a toolkit of fundamental nursing practice and communication skills applicable across the lifespan, and for acknowledging diversity within different cultural groups.
NURS1005 Interruptions to Normal Physiology
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 9x2hr lectures and 9x2hr tutorials Prerequisites: NURS1001 Assessment: concept map (25%), written assessment/project (35%) and concept map - clinical example (40%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study will provide students with a contextual link between human physiology and alterations to physiological processes and pathophysiological phenomena encountered in patients in clinical settings. This will involve further exploration of the homeostatic control of body processes and how compensatory mechanisms are manifest in patients. The topics of oxygenation, protection, metabolism, neuro-endocrine regulation, and elimination will be explored in the context of disease and disorders associated with these processes. This will extend students' understandings of complex physiological alterations and pathophysiology.
NURS1006 Understanding Experiences of Illness
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 9x2hr lectures, 9x2hr tutorials, clinical placement Prerequisites: NURS1002 Assessment: experience of illness activity part a (10%), experience of illness activity part b (45%), written examination (45%) and off-campus clinical assessment Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit focuses on the different ways in which individuals subjectively experience health, illness and care. The unit explores meanings of health and distinguishes between illness and disease. Theories that inform our understandings of what it is to be human are examined including, subjectivity, embodiment and the development of emotions across the lifespan. Attention is drawn to factors arising in illness and disability, such as issues of self-identity and
embodiment in illness and social attitudes to illness, and how these impact on the individual experience. With this knowledge in mind, the nurse-patient relationship is critically examined within a person-centred framework of care. Trust and vulnerability are critically examined as a component of this relationship. Central to this framework is communication, engagement and therapeutic listening, and students will explore these aspects of their nurse-patient relationships and consider how these may vary in different healthcare settings and with people of different cultural backgrounds and different ethical positions.
embodiment in illness and social attitudes to illness, and how these impact on the individual experience. With this knowledge in mind, the nurse-patient relationship is critically examined within a person-centred framework of care. Trust and vulnerability are critically examined as a component of this relationship. Central to this framework is communication, engagement and therapeutic listening, and students will explore these aspects of their nurse-patient relationships and consider how these may vary in different healthcare settings and with people of different cultural backgrounds and different ethical positions.
NURS1007 Health Research
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 9x2hr lectures, 6x2hr tutorials Assessment: tutorial worksheets (15%), written paper (50%) and examination (35%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study builds on the understandings developed in Population Health to Personal Healthcare and develops students understanding of research within a health and healthcare setting. Research plays a significant role in advancing nursing theory and practice. An understanding of the relationship between research and evidence for practice is based on developing a foundational knowledge of the context, the process, and the application of research to health and healthcare. Students will explore these dimensions of research in health, developing their research skills and knowledge in all other units of study in this course.
NURS1008 Acute Care Nursing Practice
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 9x2hr lectures, 4x2hr tutorials, 9x2hr clinical labs and clinical placement Prerequisites: NURS1002 Assessment: online activity (10%), case study or essay (35%), written examination (45%), on-campus clinical practice appraisal (10%) and off-campus clinical placement Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study will examine the integration of theoretical and clinical components of nursing knowledge to enable the provision of care to acutely ill patients. From a person-centred care perspective the responses of individuals and their families to an acute disruption in health will be explored. The content of this unit relates to medical/surgical nursing and focuses on the themes of disruptions to health, the impact of illness and surgery, the process of nursing care, especially in the peri-operative phase for individuals and their families, based on an evidence-based approach to nursing care. Legislation and legal responsibilities and nursing actions in relation to treatment, surgery and medication administration are also examined in this unit.
NURS2001 Introduction to Pharmacology
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 10x2-hr tutorials, 2x2-hr clinical labs Prerequisites: NURS1001 and NURS1005 Assessment: written drug information (30%) and class work book (20%) and exam (50%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This introductory unit of Pharmacology will be taught jointly by the Discipline of Pharmacology, School of Medical Science, Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney and Sydney Nursing School. From the lecture content students will develop an understanding of drug action, the relationship between molecular structure and drug activity, drug metabolism and dosage and some therapeutic uses of drugs. In addition, through tutorials and clinical laboratory sessions, students will be provided with an opportunity to apply the underlying principles of pharmacology to their nursing practice by learning to:
a) search evidence-based drug information sources for relevant information;
b) apply and integrate the evidence-based pharmacological information to simple case studies in ways which optimise safe medication management, and
c) calculate dosage adjustments accurately.
Students will learn about the legal and professional requirements associated with the quality use of medicines in nursing practice.
a) search evidence-based drug information sources for relevant information;
b) apply and integrate the evidence-based pharmacological information to simple case studies in ways which optimise safe medication management, and
c) calculate dosage adjustments accurately.
Students will learn about the legal and professional requirements associated with the quality use of medicines in nursing practice.
NURS2002 Child & Adolescent Health & Care
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 6x2-hr tutorials, 4x2-hr clinical labs, clinical placement (40 hours) Prerequisites: NURS1008 Assessment: group presentation (20%) and assignment (40%) and exam (40%) and clinical assessment (satisfactory/unsatisfactory) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study introduces students to children and young peoples' nursing. Essential skills and knowledge for paediatric, child and youth health nursing across a variety of clinical and community settings will prepare students for critical thinking and problem solving within this field. The unit emphasises contemporary issues impacting on the health of children, young people, and their families and students will have the opportunity to examine interventions and strategies aimed at improving health outcomes.
NURS2003 Contexts of Health & Disease
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 6x2-hr tutorials Assessment: essay (40%) and group work (15%) and exam (45%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study builds on the first year unit, Population Health to Personal Healthcare. It examines in more depth a range of social determinants of health that are relevant in the Australian context and also internationally. It explores global health and disease issues as they relate to natural disasters, national and international conflicts, the spread of infectious diseases, and the migrations of large numbers of people across national borders, including refugees and asylum seekers. The unit also focuses on the health-related experiences of refugees and asylum seekers in Australia. Contemporary ideas and beliefs about health and illness in Australia will be critically examined, including western and non-western approaches. The theories that underpin systems of care will be explored. The use of complementary and alternative medicines in Australia will be critically examined. Finally, students will explore theoretical perspectives on caring for people from diverse cultural and social backgrounds, particularly focusing on nursing care in Australia.
NURS2004 Understanding Mental Health & Illness
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 10x2-hr tutorials and clinical placement (40 hours) Prerequisites: NURS1008 Assessment: reflection activity (25%) and case study (35%) and exam (40%) and off-campus clinical assessment (satisfactory/unsatisfactory) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit is the first of two mental health nursing units in the program and is based on the principle that mental health knowledge and skills are essential for all nurses, regardless of their healthcare setting. The unit is underpinned by an evidence-based holistic understanding of mental health and illness. The unit aim is to introduce students to constructs of mental health and wellbeing and mental illness and to the nurse's role in promoting mental health, preventing mental illness and minimising the negative effects of illness for individuals, family/carers and the community. Students will explore and develop core mental health nursing values, skills and knowledge during the unit. Consumer and carer perspectives will inform students' understandings of mental health and mental health problems as experienced across the lifespan by children, young people and adults, and older persons of varying cultural and gendered backgrounds. Mental health problems are explored with respect to the latest evidence for risk/protective factors, symptomatology, comorbidities, nursing care, and psychotherapeutic and physical treatment approaches. The nurse's effective use of self and the therapeutic nurse/client interpersonal relationship as core mental health nursing skills are addressed from theoretical and practical perspectives. Students will develop key mental health assessment and clinical nursing skills. The scope of nursing practice is addressed in a range of mental health and ethico-legal contexts with the overall aim of generating nursing care that supports effective outcomes for mental health consumers and their family/carers.
NURS2005 Pharmacology, People & Practice
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 6x2-hr tutorials Prerequisites: NURS2001 Assessment: essay (30%) and case study (10%) and exam (60%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit will be taught jointly by the Discipline of Pharmacology, School of Medical Science, Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney and Sydney Nursing School. Students will develop an understanding of how drugs affect the body in health and disease. The main themes for the unit include how they are discovered and developed and how they work in the central nervous system. Drug treatment of common illnesses such as hay-fever, peptic ulcer and asthma will be discussed along with the use of recreational drugs and some of their associated problems. Students will be provided with an opportunity to apply the underlying principles of pharmacology to nursing practice. By integrating evidence-based pharmacological knowledge to case studies they will learn to optimise safe medication management.
NURS2006 Ageing, Health & Care
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 6x2-hr tutorials, 6x2-hr clinical labs, clinical placement (80 hours) Prerequisites: NURS1008 Assessment: essay (40%) and group work (15%) and exam (45%) and off-campus clinical appraisal (satisfactory/unsatisfactory) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This unit of study is designed to take a broad view of ageing across the adult lifespan. The person-centred philosophy of care is incorporated into this unit to examine the relationship between ageing, health and care. The experience of ageing is explored from multidimensional views, including biological, physiological, social and cultural perspectives. This unit also discusses demographic transition, impact on the population profile, psychosocial and behavioural aspects of ageing and their influence on health and wellbeing. Common ageing problems and current epidemiological trends, nationally and internationally, will be examined. A focus on health priorities to address changing needs of an ageing population will also be discussed in this unit. Healthy ageing is an important goal for Australian society and the global population. The unit will also explore perspectives on healthy and successful ageing, and consider the value of health education and health promotion for older people and the relevance of a primary health approach, as well as the role of nurses in relation to these.
NURS2007 Clinical Practice in Mental Health
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 2 Classes: 13x2-hr lectures, 10x2-hr clinical workshops, clinical placement (80 hours) Prerequisites: NURS2004 Corequisites: NURS2005 Assessment: interpersonal relationship paper (30%) and intervention plan (50%) and therapeutic skills assessment (20%) and off-campus clinical assessment (satisfactory/unsatisfactory) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day Faculty: Nursing (Sydney Nursing School)
This practice-focused unit is the second mental health nursing unit in the program, and extends the foundation knowledge and skills gained in the initial mental health nursing unit. This unit provides students with an opportunity to develop their understandings of mental health problems and to explore a range of complex mental health issues across the lifespan. The needs of special populations are explored, including perinatal mental health, infant, child and adolescent mental health problems, and the mental health of older persons. Therapeutic approaches used in mental health are a particular focus and students will have the opportunity to extend their knowledge and skills in specific individual and group evidence-based interventions. The unit aims to equip students with the fundamental knowledge and skills necessary to offer evidence-based interventions and contribute to service developments which promote socially inclusive mental healthcare for individuals, families and communities. Holistic approaches that will be taught include recovery focused and supportive interventions to help consumers take control of their own mental health and wellbeing by providing the appropriate support and intervention and involving them in their own recovery.
Part-time study patterns for the Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies)
Unit of study tables Years 1–2
Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies) (Part time)
NURS1001 Health and Human Biology
Credit points: 6 Session: Semester 1 Classes: lectures 13x2hours and workshops 8x2hours Assessment: on-line test (20%), human biology workbook site visit (30%) and written examination (50%) Campus: Mallett Street Mode of delivery: Normal (lecture/lab/tutorial) Day
This unit of study is designed to provide students with an introductory level understanding of the concepts related to human anatomy and physiology. The unit will focus on the major body organ systems and the interrelationship between these systems. The integration of the body organ systems will provide a basis to explore processes fundamental to health, including oxygenation, metabolism, elimination, movement, neuro-endocrine regulation, protection, and reproduction.
The key physiological processes of each body organ system will be explored using the principle of homeostasis to develop a beginner's level understanding of compensatory mechanisms that may occur during alterations of physiological function and illness. This will provide students with a foundational basis with which to understand more complex physiological alterations and pathophysiology later in the degree.
The key physiological processes of each body organ system will be explored using the principle of homeostasis to develop a beginner's level understanding of compensatory mechanisms that may occur during alterations of physiological function and illness. This will provide students with a foundational basis with which to understand more complex physiological alterations and pathophysiology later in the degree.