NMC Revalidation: FAQs. nursingtimes.net/nursing-practice/revalidation



Similar documents
What it means for registrants, patients and employers. Helen Whyley, Nursing Officer Welsh Government

Director of Nursing & Quality. Helen Coleman Associate Director for Nursing Workforce

We are the nursing and midwifery regulator for England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Islands.

How to revalidate with the NMC Requirements for renewing your registration

How to revalidate with the NMC Requirements for renewing your registration

Aneurin Bevan UHB Welsh Pilot Site. NMC Revalidation ABUHB

VIP Nursing pack of templates to support agency Nurses in the revalidation process, including: Practice hours record log 2

Appropriate staffing in health and care settings

Continuing Professional Development. FAQs

Guidance on using social media responsibly

The Code. Professional standards of practice and behaviour for nurses and midwives

Conditions of Practice 25 February 2015

Council Meeting, 26/27 March 2014

The Code: Standards of conduct, performance and ethics for nurses and midwives

NMC response to the Francis report July 2013 Page 1 of 42

The code: Standards of conduct, performance and ethics for nurses and midwives

The Code Standards of conduct, performance and ethics for nurses and midwives

Introduction Continuing Competence Framework Components Glossary of Terms. ANMC Continuing Competence Framework

July 2013 Page 1 of 6

Advice and information for employers of nurses and midwives

Standards to support learning and assessment in practice

Guidance on professional conduct. For nursing and midwifery students

Revalidation of nurses and midwives

Supporting information for appraisal and revalidation

OPEN BOARD OF DIRECTORS 2 nd December 2015

The guidance 2. Guidance on professional conduct for nursing and midwifery students. Your guide to practice

ACM Interim Council, MEAC & SRAC collated response to the Public consultation on review of the Registered nurse standards for practice

The Performance Review Standards

An NMC guide for students of nursing and midwifery

FAQs for Standards to support learning and assessment in practice

Standards to support learning and assessment in practice. NMC standards for mentors, practice teachers and teachers

Putting the patient first: issues for HR from the Francis report

Date: Meeting: Trust Board Public Meeting. 29 October Title of Paper: Francis 2 Summary Update Report

MENTOR POLICY FOR PRE-REGISTRATION STUDENTS OF NURSING AND MIDWIFERY

MENTOR PREPARATION FOR NURSING EDUCATION IN NORTHERN IRELAND

Advanced Practice (Public Health)

Workshop materials Completed templates and forms

In certain circumstances it should be a criminal offence to breach these duties or obstruct another from performing them.

Mid Staffordshire NHSFT Public Inquiry

Supporting information for appraisal and revalidation

How To Reform Social Work

The following facts address common queries that you might have about CPD.

Continuing Professional Development

Witness information. Investigations

Mentor Portfolio of Evidence for Nurses: Recognition of Mentorship Skills, Guidance and Mapping Framework for Stage 3 mentors/practice Teachers.

Compassion In Practice: A Summary of the Implementation Plans. are. is our business. Developing our culture of compassionate care

Continuing Professional Development Record.

How to Become a Successful Retail Regulator

Complaints. against nurses and midwives. Record keeping. Guidance for nurses and midwives. Helping you support patients and the public

Position statement on the education and training of health care assistants (HCAs)

How To Improve Your Business

Standards of proficiency. Social workers in England

Best Interests Assessor Senior Practitioner

Revalidation - what might be appropriate for Australia

Good Practice Guidelines for Appraisal

Principles of Nursing Practice: principles and measures consultation

How to make a complaint

Supporting information for appraisal and revalidation: guidance for General Practitioners

PURPOSE OF THE PAPER To provide the committee with an overview of the Director of Nursing portfolio during quarter 1 of

NMC Standards of Competence required by all Nurses to work in the UK

Council - 26 March Professional indemnity insurance. Executive summary and recommendations

Guidelines on continuing professional development

Standards for pre-registration nursing education

An Appraisal Handbook for General Practice Nurses

SETTING THE DIRECTION FOR NURSING AND MIDWIFERY EDUCATION: DELIVERY PLAN

National Approach to Mentor Preparation for Nurses and Midwives

Nursing & Midwifery Education JOB DESCRIPTION. HSC Clinical Education Centre Altnagelvin Area Hospital Site

BA (Hons) Applied Nursing and Social Work (Learning Disability) GENERIC SOCIAL WORK PLACEMENT

RETURN TO PRACTICE AND MAINTENANCE OF PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE PROGRAMME (NURSING) Mentor Handbook

CHRE Performance Review 2008/09 Nursing and Midwifery Council

CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT GUIDELINES

1.1 Profession: Senior Academic Health Psychologist

Nursing Agencies. Minimum Standards

Conduct and Competence Committee. Substantive Order Review Meeting. 25 September 2015

Nursing and Midwifery Council mentor domains and outcomes and the NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework

Review of policy on professional insurance and indemnity

Part(s) of the register: Registered Nurse Sub part 1 Adult Nursing Level 1

Response of the Royal College of Nursing to the Nursing and Midwifery Council consultation on revalidation

Health Committee information

Medical Appraisal Guide

Delivering High Quality Compassionate Care

Recognising excellence within the school business management profession: a guide to making an application to become a NASBM Fellow

ROYAL HOLLOWAY University of London PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION

CODE OF ETHICS AND PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT

Who is ANMAC? What are ANMAC accreditation standards?

Name. Clinical Area/Speciality. Base

JOB DESCRIPTION. To contribute to the formulation, implementation and evaluation of the Nursing and Midwifery Strategy.

Record keeping. Guidance for nurses and midwives

4a Revalidation: Guidance on Colleague and Patient Questionnaires Annex A. Revalidation: Guidance on Colleague and Patient Questionnaires

THIS POST IS FOR THOSE EMPLOYED IN A HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE ORGANISATION (NI) JOB DESCRIPTION

Information about cases considered by Case Examiners

Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. Faculty of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare

Registered Nurse Clinical Services

Nursing & Midwifery Learning Disability Liaison Nurse Acute Services Band 7 subject to job evaluation. Trustwide

STEP schools. Educational Psychologist 36.5 hours per week Term Time only Salary - 40,000-45,000 (dependent upon experience)

Improving the Performance of Doctors. Complaints Investigations and Remediation

Raising concerns. Guidance for nurses and midwives

South African Nursing Council (Under the provisions of the Nursing Act, 2005)

Report to: Public Trust Board Agenda item: 11 Date of Meeting: 18 December 2013

QUESTIONS NSW NURSES AND MIDWIVES MIGHT HAVE ABOUT RECENCY OF PRACTICE:

Transcription:

NMC Revalidation: FAQs

Introduction Every nurse who wants to stay on the register and legally be able to work in the UK, must revalidate from December 2015, when they come to re-register. There is a lot of confusion about what this means for nurses and what s involved. The Nursing and Midwifery Council are still fine tuning some of the details, but if you are due to revalidate or have to have nursing staff who are due to revalidate at the end of this year or beginning of 2016, it s best to get prepared. So we ve put together this handy guide to help you get ready for revalidation. Jenni Middleton Editor, Nursing Times Revalidation will affect all nurses and midwives working in the UK. Find out how re-registering with the NMC is changing and why. 2

Why is the NMC introducing revalidation? The idea behind revalidation keeping nurses practice up-to-date is nothing new. However, there were concerns that the previous system, PREP, was not effectively monitored. The new system includes an additional level of monitoring as every nurse will need to be signed off by their manager or someone in a similar position. Revalidation was a key recommendation from the Francis inquiry into failures of care at Mid Staffordshire Foundation Trust. It aims to prevent future scandals by improving patient safety and ensuring nurses are all providing care that meets an acceptable standard. It will mean nurses need to do more to remain on the Nursing and Midwifery Council register. The number of hours of required continuing professional development is increasing from 35 hours in three years to 40. Nurses will need to obtain five pieces of practice related feedback. This can be formal or informal, written or verbal; and you will need to complete five written reflections on the NMC code and discuss this with another registrant. Whereas in the past, nurses were asked to confirm that they had undertaken CPD in order to re-register, this was only checked if a nurse was subject to an NMC spot-check. Under the new revalidation system, every nurse will need to provide evidence that they have met the standards to their manager. How has the NMC developed the revalidation model? In August, the NMC completed a six-month public consultation on revalidation and revising the code of conduct. This was run by independent companies and involved two online surveys, workshops and focus groups. The NMC also held five stakeholder summits and other engagement activities across the UK which were attended by nurses, midwives, employers, leaders, educators and representatives. The NMC then published an evidence review based on the consultation findings and drew up a draft revalidation policy for piloting. Pilots started in January 2015. Will revalidation be the same for nurses and midwives? All nurses and midwives will need to comply, so all nursing and midwifery students who qualify after December 2015 will need to understand the new requirements. Nurses and midwives who do not comply will no longer be registered. What sort of activities count as continuing professional development? Revalidation means you will need to have undertaken 40 hours of CPD within the past three years to re-register with the NMC. The NMC has stated that there is no such thing as approved activity to count towards this CPD requirement, however it is important to remember that it should be relevant to your practice or may not be counted: don t do something in your learning that you won t do in practice. CPD could include completing online learning units, reading a clinical article and doing a piece on reflective practice on it within your team, submitting an awards entry, or attending an educational event, conference or training seminar. You must maintain a professional profile of this activity to show your employer (or the person who will sign you off ) at re-registration. 3

How will the NMC check that the revalidation model works? The NMC has pledged to engage extensively with those affected by the model to ensure it is effective and workable. It will be consulting on its model of revalidation throughout the pilots, and would like to hear from nurses and midwives who work in a range of employment settings, as well as patient and public groups. The model of feedback is being used by other regulated professionals and has been further supported by recent enquiries and recommendations to the NMC (such as those included in the Francis report). When does revalidation start? From December 2015, all nurses and midwives who are due to re-register at that point or from then on will start using revalidation. This means that by December 2018, everyone on the register would have undergone revalidation. In spring 2015, the Revalidation Pilot Project will test revalidation operationally with a selected few sites before it applies to all those on the register from December 2015 onwards. Draft NMC guidance specific to revalidation has been released and more details will be available in June after these pilot sites have given feedback and gone through the process. The NMC is now consulting on how revalidation can work in practice to inform the development of its guidance prior to publication. What is the difference between revalidation and re-registration? Revalidation will be the process by which registered nurses and midwives will demonstrate to the NMC that they continue to remain fit to practise. Revalidation will take place every three years at the point of renewal of registration. What will I have to do to revalidate? Nurses and midwives will have ownership of, and will be held accountable for, their own revalidation process. Every three years at the point where they have to renew their registration, nurses and midwives will need to demonstrate to the NMC that they continue to remain fit to practise in order to remain on the register and able to work in the UK. A nurse or midwife will be required to declare they have practised for 450 hours during the last three years and completed the required amount of continuing professional development (CPD), which is thought to increase from 35 hours over three years to 40 hours over the same period. Revalidation will also require nurses and midwives to obtain confirmation from a third party on their continuing fitness to practise. This will come from someone well placed to comment on a nurse or midwife s practice based on the requirements in the Code, usually a line manager and, where possible, a registrant. Nurses and midwives will need to show as well how they are using practice related feedback from patients, colleagues and others to improve their standards of care. From December 2015, all nurses and midwives who are due to re-register will then start using revalidation. This means that by December 2018, everyone on the register would have undergone revalidation. 4

Who will approve my revalidation? Confirmation is received from someone well placed to comment on a nurse or midwife s practice. This will confirm that a nurse or midwife is performing to the standards set out in the Code and it will be based on information available at the time. What happens if I fail my revalidation? Nurses and midwives have to pass revalidation or they will fail to be registered to legally work in the UK in their profession. Nurses and midwives should be collecting the evidence to support their revalidation throughout the three years, and discussing it with their employer at appraisal, so should be aware before the revalidation date if they have or haven t met the NMC s requirements. How will the NMC check that nurses and midwives have fulfilled their requirements for revalidation? The Nursing and Midwifery Council will rely on employers to verify that every nurse and midwife: Continues to remain fit to practise; Have met the requirements for practice and continuing professional development; Have sought and received third party feedback which has informed their reflection on their practice. This feedback could be from patients, carers, students (for educators) or peers; Have sought and received third party confirmation that they are fit to practise. A third party (likely to be a manager, another registrant or a supervisor) will need to confirm that the nurse or midwife is adhering to the Code and standards, and is fit to practise. The NMC will not personally be able to check every portfolio of evidence, just as it doesn t now with PREP requirements. The profession is expected to uphold these standards themselves. What has changed in the new NMC Code? Prioritise people, practise effectively, preserve safety and promote professionalism are the four statements of the revised Nursing and Midwifery Council code of conduct, which aims to improve standards of patient care. The code will be central to practice, and will govern how patients are treated with dignity and respect as well as clinical competence. Specifically, it features new instructions including to treat people with compassion and to ensure the physical, social and psychological needs of people are assessed and to exercise candour when any errors or harm have occurred. Keep up to date on the latest news and updates on revalidation at: 5

Know your team are safe to care Nursing Times Learning Units provide you with evidence that individual staff have engaged in the essential learning and are competent. Nurses do a test at the beginning and end of each learning unit so you can verify how much they have learnt; 92% of users said the learning was very effective.* Nursing Times Group Access is surprisingly good value for money. Find out more about how it can help your organisation attract and retain nurses. Email: corporate.enquries@emap.com Call: 020 3033 2868 6 Make sure all your nurses are safe to care with Group Access nursingtimes.net/subscribe/groupaccess