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District nursing apprenticeship standard approved

District Education
The apprenticeship standard for district nursing has been approved by The Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education

The apprenticeship standard for district nursing has been approved by The Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education.

The occupational standard has been given approval subject to one minor amendment and comes after eighteen months of work involving key stakeholders, including employers, approved higher education providers professional nursing organisations. The trailblazer group that prepared the draft standard has been led by Queen’s Nurse Steph Lawrence, Interim Executive Director of Nursing at Leeds Community Healthcare and Leeds GP Confederation.

‘We are delighted that the District Nurse apprenticeship standard has been approved. This is a testament to the hard work of Steph Lawrence and others, who had the vision, the knowledge and the determination to see the application process through from first beginnings in 2017,’ said Crystal Oldman, chief executive of the QNI.

‘The new NHS Long Term Plan in England places renewed emphasis on the importance of delivering high quality care to patients in the home and recognises that appropriately skilled and qualified District Nurses are the practitioners who will lead, manage, co-ordinate and deliver complex care, working autonomously within their communities in every village, town and city, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. District Nurses are the unsung heroes of the NHS, supporting people to be cared for safely at home and preventing thousands of hospital admissions every day.

The standard will not be ready for delivery until the end point assessment has been approved later in the year. Once it has been finalise, the standard will lead to a new national apprenticeship model for district nurse specialist education in England and will provide an employer-funded route to achieving the NMC approved District Nurse qualification.

‘Achieving approval of an apprenticeship standard for the District Nursing Specialist Practitioner Qualification demonstrates clear recognition of the highly skilled specialist role that is critical to patient safety and the overall success of the Long Term Plan for the NHS in England,’ added Ms Oldman.

‘Given the recent doubts about continued funding from Health Education England for the District Nursing Specialist Practitioner Qualification, the new apprenticeship offers an alternative funding model for the qualification of District Nurse, alongside but not replacing the existing funding model. There is a very bright future ahead for all nurses coming into the District Nursing service.’