EPN

Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing Programme description

Programme name, Norwegian
Videreutdanning i barnesykepleie
Valid from
2021 FALL
ECTS credits
90 ECTS credits
Duration
3 semesters
Schedule
Here you can find an example schedule for first year students.
Programme history

Introduction

The Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing is based on the national curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing and the regulations relating to the national curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing adopted by the Ministry of Education and Research on 1 December 2005 and meets the requirements stipulated in these documents. The programme has a scope of 90 credits, and is taken as a full-time course of study over one and a half years. After completing the programme, the students will have action competence in the field of paediatric nursing; see the requirements set out in the national curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing with pertaining regulations.

Paediatric nursing

Paediatric nursing is special expertise in nursing acutely and/or critically ill children. By ¿children¿ is meant persons under 18 years of age. Children are not 'little adults', and special expertise is required to care for this patient group. Children depend on their caregivers, and paediatric nurses address the family perspective by including caregivers as equal partners when nursing children.

Paediatric nursing entails assessing acute situations, prioritising and implementing measures to maintain or restore vital functions, or facilitating dying with dignity. Paediatric nursing also entails limiting suffering, pain and traumatic experiences, preventing developmental damage and promoting normal development in children. The preventive, therapeutic, pain-relieving and stress-relieving, health promoting and rehabilitative and habilitative aspects of paediatric nursing inform all assessments and activities.

The patient group comprises children who:

  • are premature
  • have congenital diseases or developmental anomalies
  • have had an accident
  • suffer from acute and/or critical illness
  • are under assessment for or are suffering an exacerbation of a long-term or chronic illness
  • have a disability
  • are living under conditions that cause physical, mental or social developmental disorders and/or damage

Paediatric nursing¿s target group also includes caregivers, siblings and other family members.

Relevance to working life

The Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing is intended to help to cover society¿s increasing need for specialist nursing skills, primarily in the specialist health service, but also in the municipal health service.

Paediatric nurses are in high demand, as they are key personnel in the specialist health service when it comes to providing professionally sound healthcare to acutely and critically ill children. The specialist health service increasingly demands specialisation, and seeks paediatric nurses who practise their profession in a sound manner and on a scientific basis. Today, we can treat many diseases and injuries that could not be treated in the past, including many premature babies. The children treated by the specialist health service today are sicker than they used to be. This development makes new and stricter requirements of paediatric nurses.

They are also required to work in an evidence-based manner where their nursing practice is based on knowledge gained from research and experience, in addition to patient knowledge. Paediatric nurses shall be capable of analysing and taking a critical approach to existing theories and methods in advanced medical treatment and paediatric nursing. Moreover, they shall be able to contribute to new ideas and innovation processes in their own practice, and make independent use of relevant methods for quality-related work (professional development, quality assurance or quality control work) in the field of paediatric nursing. Paediatric nurses are qualified to take greater responsibility for evidence-based paediatric nursing of acutely and/or critically ill patients in and outside a hospital setting.

Paediatric nurses primarily work in paediatric medicine departments, paediatric surgery departments, intermediate care units for children, neonatal and paediatric intensive care units, children's emergency care units, outpatient clinics and adult departments with children's beds. Their expertise is also relevant for work in habilitation units and child and adolescent psychiatry departments.

The municipal health service is also experiencing a growing need for specialist nursing skills. The Act relating to Municipal Health and Care Services, etc. (the Health and Care Services Act) has given the municipalities a role in the treatment of acute-onset illness, exacerbation of chronic illness and in follow-up care for patients whose hospital treatment is finished. Therefore, nurses with specialist skills in nursing acutely and/or critically ill children will also be in demand in the municipal health service.

Relevance to further studies

 

The Advanced Programme is identical to the first three semesters of the Master’s Programme in Paediatric Nursing at OsloMet – Oslo Metropolitan University. Students who complete the Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing in accordance with this programme description, will only have to write the master’s thesis to be awarded the degree of Master of Paediatric Nursing, provided that they meet the admission requirements for the master's degree programme. The last opportunity for this integration is spring 2023.

From autumn 2022, it is planned to start a Master`s degree programme in Advanced Nursing to Acute and Critically Ill Patients with several specialisations. The current master's program in Paediatric Nursing will therefore be discontinued as a separate program. Upon admission to a new master's program, larger parts of Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing can still be incorporated.

Target group

The target group for the programme is authorised general nurses who would like to work with acutely and/or critically ill children ¿ primarily in the specialist health service, but also in the municipal health service.

Admission requirements

Admission to the programme is in accordance with the Regulations relating to Admission to Studies at OsloMet ¿ Oslo Metropolitan University and the national curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing with pertaining regulations, adopted by the Ministry of Education and Research on 1 December 2005.

The academic basis for admission to the programme is a three-year bachelor's degree in nursing or equivalent. Applicants must also hold a Norwegian authorisation as a general nurse and have at least two years¿ somatic nursing experience from the specialist health service after receiving their authorisation. 

 

Additional points (maximum 2,5 points) are awarded for all relevant work experience beyond the minimum requirement. By relevant work experience is meant professional nursing experience from children's departments or similar.

There is no separate quota for applicants who compete only on the basis of grade points.

Applicants who are admitted to the programme must submit a transcript of police records, cf. the Regulations for admission to higher education Chapter 6.

 

The use of clothing that covers the face is incompatible with taking the programme.

Learning outcomes

After completing the Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing, the candidate is expected to have achieved the following overall learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and competence:

Knowledge

The candidate

  • has advanced knowledge within the paediatric nurse's functions and areas of responsibility
  • has in-depth knowledge about advanced medical treatment of acutely and/or critically ill children
  • has knowledge about the scientific theory and methods of nursing
  • has in-depth knowledge of quality work, including methods for quality improvement and quality control
  • has advanced knowledge about children's physical, mental and social development
  • has advanced knowledge about children's fundamental needs and how complications and developmental damage can be prevented
  • has advanced knowledge about maintaining and restoring children's vital functions if they are compromised
  • has in-depth knowledge about children's experiences, reactions and needs in connection with acute, critical or chronic illness, in a multicultural perspective
  • has in-depth knowledge about the experiences, reactions and needs of parents and siblings when a child is acutely, critically or chronically ill, in a multicultural perspective
  • is capable of analysing paediatric nursing problems on the basis of the discipline¿s history, traditions, distinctive nature and place in society

Skills

The candidate

  • is capable of analysing and taking a critical approach to different sources of information and of using them to structure and formulate paediatric nursing argumentation
  • is capable of analysing and taking a critical approach to theories and methods in advanced paediatric medical treatment and paediatric nursing
  • is capable of observing, assessing and identifying a child's general and special needs, resources and problems through communication and cooperation with the child and its caregivers
  • is capable of prioritising and initiating measures necessary to maintain or restore vital functions
  • is capable of preventing complications in connection with acute and/or critical illness and advanced medical treatment when nursing children
  • is capable of reducing the stress, pain and discomfort of children and parents in connection with advanced medical treatment and paediatric nursing
  • is capable of identifying signs of neglect and child abuse and of initiating necessary measures
  • is capable of looking after the healthy aspects of the child and promoting coping, growth and possibilities for development
  • is capable of planning, organising, coordinating and cooperating on the available resources to ensure that they are used in a targeted manner in the patient's best interests
  • is capable of independent work on practical and theoretical problem-solving relating to the functions and areas of responsibility of a paediatric nurse
  • is capable of applying pedagogical and subject didactics principles when informing, teaching and providing guidance to children and caregivers from different cultures, as well as to colleagues and other members of the healthcare team
  • is capable of practising paediatric nursing in accordance with ethical principles and healthcare legislation

Competence

The candidate

  • has action competence in the field of paediatric nursing and contributes to patient safety
  • is capable of carrying out wholly or partly compensatory nursing in the event of self-care deficits in relation to a child's fundamental needs
  • is capable of analysing relevant ethical issues in paediatric nursing based on discipline knowledge, research, experience and patient knowledge
  • is capable of applying his/her knowledge and skills to new fields to carry out advanced tasks and projects in paediatric nursing
  • is capable of communicating extensive independent work and masters the forms of expression used in paediatric nursing
  • is capable of communicating about issues, analyses and conclusions in paediatric nursing, both with specialists and with the general public
  • is capable of cooperating with members of his/her own profession and across professions in the treatment of children
  • is capable of contributing to new ideas and innovation processes in professional practice

Content and structure

The programme comprises 8 compulsory courses, which make up a total of 90 credits. Theoretical studies make up 45 credits, while clinical training accounts for 45 credits. The programme is taken as a full-time course of study over a period of one and a half years.

National curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing

In order to ensure that students who complete the Advanced Programme in Paediatric Nursing are qualified to work as paediatric nurses, the programme meets the requirements set out in the national curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing with pertaining regulations adopted by the Ministry of Education and Research on 1 December 2005, both in terms of content and the breakdown of credits.

Progress requirements

  • All coursework requirements in a course must be met before a student can take the exam.
  • Students must have passed ABIO6000 Natural Science related to Nursing in order to take the exam in BARN6000 Paediatrics, Neonatology and Paediatric Surgery
  • Students must have passed BARNPRA10 Clinical Studies in Paediatric Nursing, Level 1 in order to start BARNPRA20 Clinical Studies in Paediatric Nursing, Level 2.
  • Students must have passed BARNPRA20 Clinical Studies in Paediatric Nursing, Level 2 in order to start BARNPRA3 Clinical Studies in Paediatric Nursing, Level 3.
Optional course Spans multiple semesters

Teaching and learning methods

The work and teaching methods used in the programme are based on a sociocultural perspective on learning. This means that the student participates in and contributes to a learning community where fellow students, lecturers and others are important to his/her learning. The goal of the work methods is to encourage independence, fresh thinking, own activity and reflection. Feedback, formative (continuous) assessment and supervision will be the learning community's key activities to advance learning. Learning is considered a process that involves the whole person and is manifested through the change in the person learning.

Study methods that promote evidence-based practice are used throughout the programme in that the student integrates knowledge from research and experience and patient knowledge.

The programme emphasises student-active methods intended to encourage the students to actively seek relevant and reliable sources of knowledge. The process will alternate between individual work and interaction with fellow students and others in group work, seminars, simulations and practical training.

Lectures

Lectures are primarily used to introduce new subject matter, give an overview and highlight main elements and links between different topics, and also to communicate relevant issues. The lectures in the three common courses for several of our advanced nursing programmes will be held as joint lectures, but joint lectures will also be used in other courses. Most lectures are held in a Scandinavian language, but they can also take place in English.

Group work Group work, which is compulsory attendance, is used as a teaching method to encourage cooperation between students, support the learning of subject matter and provide training in cooperation and interaction skills, which are necessary skills in professional practice.

Seminars

Seminars, which is compulsory attendance, are held in which students present assignments they have been working on and receive oral feedback from their fellow students and lecturers. The purpose of the seminars is to stimulate each other's learning process, clarify students' own understanding of the subject and develop cooperation skills. The students are given the opportunity to practise their academic formulation skills, and academic discussions between students and lecturers are facilitated.

Simulation

Simulation, which is compulsory attendance, is used to practise procedures and become familiar with equipment and machines. Simulation is also used to gain teamwork experience and skills in relation to rarely occurring and life-threatening situations, particularly complex situations that require prompt and appropriate action.

 

Self-study

Not all topics are covered by organised teaching activities, and students are expected to acquire knowledge of the remaining topics through self-study. Students come to this programme with different preconditions for learning, and self-study enables them to prioritise topics and areas they want to focus on. Self-study also helps to encourage independent activity and reflection.

Practical training

Practical training, which is compulsory attendance, is an important work method in the programme. See a more detailed description in the chapter on practical training.

Practical training

The field of practice is an important qualification arena for developing action competence in paediatric nursing and evidence-based practice. Professionally sound paediatric nursing practice must be learned in direct interaction with patients. This is the only way in which students can gain experience and encounter challenges of sufficient complexity to allow them to achieve the programme¿s learning outcomes. When nursing acutely and/or critically ill children and young people, decisions must often be made quickly, and through practical training, students acquire the practical experience needed to develop an immediate understanding of the patients¿ situation and the knowledge and action required.

Practical training in the programme is organised as three courses with a total scope of 45 credits. The practical training must make up no less than 50% and no more than 60% of the programme, and at least 90% of the practical training must involve patient contact; see the requirements set out in the national curriculum for further education in paediatric nursing.

 

Clinical Studies in Paediatric Nursing

  • First semester: BARNPRA10/MBARNPRA10, 20 credits (13 weeks)
  • Second semester: BARNPRA20/MBARNPRA20, 15 credits (10 weeks)
  • Third semester: BARNPRA3/MBARNPRA3, 10 credits (7 weeks)

Practical training is organised such that on completion of the programme, the student will have gained experience of and developed paediatric nursing action competence in relation to all common conditions, important forms of treatment and different patient situations.

 

The practical training must include specialist departments where the patient¿s vital functions are threatened or failing. Students will primarily undergo clinical training at:

  • neonatal intensive care units
  • paediatric intensive care units for older children
  • paediatric surgical/intermediate care units
  • postoperative units with paediatric patients
  • paediatric medical/intermediate care units

Supervision  

Practical training will be supervised, and the student is guaranteed supervision by a nurse with advanced training or a master's degree in paediatric nursing.

Specification of learning outcomes

The student shall specify the learning outcomes for each course based on his/her own preconditions for learning and the framework conditions at the unit where the course is taken. This must be approved by the practical training supervisor and lecturer. These learning outcome descriptions must be concrete, relevant, realistic and measurable. They must describe observable behaviour, for example actions, performance or skills, or results of an unobservable mental behaviour such as a change in attitude. They are intended to help to clarify what the student needs to learn and which learning situations are required to achieve this. This provides a direction for the supervision/instruction required and indications for use in the assessment.

A conversation between the student, the practical training supervisor and the lecturer will take place within the first two or three weeks of a practical training course. The purpose of this conversation is to maintain continuity and progress in the student's learning and development. The lecturer and practical training supervisor must have received the student¿s specification of the learning outcomes in advance so that the conversation can be as constructive as possible.

Shifts

The practical training courses comprise approx. 32 hours per week. The student prepares a shift plan for each course for approval by the university and the department where the student is taking the practical training. Continuity in supervision is a goal when preparing the shift plan, and the student should therefore follow the practical training supervisor¿s shift arrangements where possible.

Compulsory attendance in clinical training

Attendance is compulsory in areas that are important for achieving action competence as a paediatric nurse and where the student cannot acquire knowledge through self-study. This means that attendance is compulsory during practical training courses. In order to pass a practical training course, the student must have attended at least 90% of the planned activities in each course. Students must make up for absence exceeding 10% by agreement with the lecturer and the practical training establishment. If a student's absence exceeds 20%, he/she will fail the course. Absence is calculated on the basis of the student's approved shift plan for each course.

Elective practical training

Students have the opportunity to organise a total of 1¿5 weeks of elective practical training in the course of the programme. The elective practical training must be completed at a practical training establishment relevant to the target group and/or functions of paediatric nurses. The student must contact the practical training establishment him/herself and submit a written application for elective practical training for the university¿s approval. Only students who have passed all their exams so far in the programme and are not at risk of failing a practical training assessment can be granted such approval. Elective practical training must be funded by the student.

Internationalisation

OsloMet has established partnerships with universities and university colleges in and outside Europe, and is a member of various academic networks. Students can apply to take parts of the programme abroad, preferably at institutions that OsloMet cooperates with. Students who wish to go on exchanges at other institutions will have to organise the exchange themselves and obtain the university's approval.

It is primarily the practical training courses in the second and third semesters that are suitable for exchanges. Only students who have passed all their exams so far in the programme and are not at risk of failing a practical training assessment can take these courses abroad.

The programme uses guest lecturers from foreign partner institutions, and the programme's own lecturers gain knowledge and experience through exchanges with the same institutions.

Work requirements

Required coursework is all types of work and tests that are conditions for being permitted to take the exam. In this programme, the required coursework comprises:

  • written assignments
  • documentation of literature selected by the student
  • teaching/providing guidance to children and their caregivers as well as fellow students and/or other health personnel
  • specifying learning outcomes for practical training courses

The main purpose of coursework requirements is to promote the students¿ progress and academic development in the programme, stimulate students to seek out and acquire new knowledge, and facilitate cooperation and communication in relation to professional issues.

Feedback

The students receive written and/or verbal feedback from the lecturer and/or fellow students on their written assignments based on the criteria of relevance, theoretical knowledge, in-depth study, ethical reflection, independence and how the assignment is presented (see Assessment of written work in the Assessment chapter of the programme description).

Approval

Required coursework is assessed as approved/not approved. Required coursework that is not approved must be improved before re-submission. If the work is not approved on re-submission, the student cannot take the ordinary exam. Students are entitled to a third attempt before the resit/rescheduled exam. If the third attempt at a coursework requirement is not approved, the student cannot take the resit/rescheduled exam and will have to wait until the ordinary exam for the following year. The student will then be entitled to three new attempts with the new class.

Assessment

Students will encounter different forms of assessment during the programme. The forms of assessment are intended to ensure a continuous process towards a twofold objective: to promote learning and document the competence achieved by the students as sufficient in relation to the applicable learning outcomes. By giving the student qualified and frequent feedback in relation to both processes and products, the information about the competence achieved can motivate the student¿s further efforts and show whether the forms of learning should be adjusted.

Each course concludes with a summative assessment. The assessment is based on the learning outcomes for the course, and what is assessed is whether the student has achieved the stipulated learning outcomes.

The assessments are carried out in accordance with the Act relating to Universities and University Colleges, the Regulations relating to Studies and Examinations at OsloMet, and the Guidelines for Appointment and Use of Examiners.

Assessment

The grading system in use is pass/fail or a grade scale with letter grades from A to F, where A is the highest grade, E is the poorest pass grade and F is a fail. In connection with group exams, all students in the group are awarded the same grade.

Resit and rescheduled exams

Resit and rescheduled exams are carried out in the same manner as the ordinary exam unless otherwise specified in the course description. In special cases, resit and rescheduled exams in courses with group exams may be held as individual exams.

Appeals against grades

Grades awarded for written exams can be appealed. It is not possible to appeal the grades awarded for oral and practical exams. In connection with a group exam, the result of an appeal will only have consequences for the candidate(s) who submitted the appeal. The other students will keep their original grade.

Assessment of written work

Written work, such as the required coursework and exam papers for ABIO6100 and BARN6100, is assessed on the basis of the criteria of relevance, theoretical knowledge, in-depth study, ethical reflection, independence and how the work is presented.

Relevance:                                     

The work must have a frame of reference that is relevant to the discipline and show that the student has applied theoretical and practical knowledge of relevance to the issue at hand. It must be linked to the paediatric nurse¿s functions and areas of responsibility.

Theoretical knowledge:           

The work must demonstrate knowledge in the independent and delegated functions of the paediatric nurse (medicine). It must contain relevant documentation from the course literature and other relevant literature and research.

In-depth study:                            

The student must elaborate on and discuss different factors that have an effect on the issue at hand and discuss how the knowledge produced can be applied in a clinical setting. Experience from practical work and literature should be used as a basis for discussing the assignment. The work must answer the issue in question.

Ethical reflection:                        

Ethical factors relating to the issue must be discussed.

Independence:                             

The work must demonstrate independent assessment, and its content must be objective, critical and analytical with discussions of positions and claims.

How the work is presented:  

The assignment must be well-organised with good written presentation, clear and unambiguous language with use of specialised terminology, and adhere to the prescribed structure and form.

Students are only entitled to feedback if their work is completed within the deadline stipulated.

Assessment of practical training

Students are subject to formativeassessment (continuous assessment) on a continuous basis throughout all the practical training courses. The assessment is intended to provide advice and guidance by determining progress, helping to improve strengths and drawing attention to areas the student needs to continue to work on. It should take account of the student's preconditions for learning, framework conditions at the practical training establishment, the learning outcomes in the course, the student¿s specification of the learning outcomes and the content of the supervision.

 

Both the student and the practical training supervisor shall prepare written assessments for each practical training course:

  • The student must submit at least three written self-assessments per practical training course.
  • The practical training supervisor must submit written assessments of the student from days or periods of supervision.

 

Students are expected to show progress through the practical training courses. The student is expected to demonstrate clear progress, take responsibility and, to an increasing extent, demonstrate the ability to make independent analyses and assessments in paediatric nursing practice. The requirement for an increasing degree of independence is expressed in the learning outcomes through the use of the expressions ¿under supervision¿, ¿with some supervision¿ and ¿independently¿. The progress in the student¿s learning is also manifested in the expectation that students should master an increasing number of areas in paediatric nursing. On completion of the final clinical course, Clinical Studies in Paediatric Nursing, Level 3, the student is expected to have achieved paediatric nursing action competence.

 

The summative assessment (product assessment) takes place at the end of each practical training course. The assessments are based on the learning outcomes for the course, the student's specification of the learning outcomes and the formative assessment made of the student during the course. The purpose of these assessments is to:

 

  • check that the student has achieved the learning outcomes for the course
  • discuss the possibilities and limitations that the student has encountered at the practical training establishment
  • clarify strengths and weaknesses and the changes that have to be made in order for the student to achieve the learning outcomes when a student has failed the course

 

The lecturer plans the assessments together with the practical training supervisor. The student writes his/her own assessment based on the programme¿s assessment form. This assessment, together with the lecturer¿s and the practical training supervisor's assessments, form the basis for the decision on whether or not the student has passed the clinical course. Students who fail a period of practical training must retake the whole training period.

Other information

The reading list totals approx. 6,000 pages, of which approx. 1,000 pages are chosen by the student. The syllabus selected by the students should be related to the in-depth assignment and the written assignments that make up the required coursework (1,000 pages).

 

Approved by the Academic Affairs Committee of the Faculty of Health Sciences: 30 January 2013

Last amended by the Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences: 8 March 2021