Programplaner og emneplaner - Student
VPSYPRA11 Relationship and Care for People with Mental Complaints Course description
- Course name in Norwegian
- Relasjon og omsorg til mennesker med psykisk lidelse
- Weight
- 20.0 ECTS
- Year of study
- 2021/2022
- Course history
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Introduction
Language of instruction: Norwegian
The relationship between mental healthcare workers, users/patients and next of kin is very important when promoting health and providing care to people with mental health complaints. Practising mental health care requires a high level of relational skills, including ethical awareness and professional expertise.
The purpose of the course is to give the students a practical introduction to and training in relational skills when interacting with people with mental health complaints. Students will take practical training that will provide a holistic understanding of the relationship between the framework conditions for service provision and the practice of mental health care. Two different forms of practical training form part of the course. The course concludes with the submission of an in-depth assignment with emphasis on user-related challenges and/or phenomena related to practical mental health care.
Master's Degree Programme in Health Sciences - specialisation in Mental Healthcare and Advanced Programme in Mental Health Care is carried out jointly.
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Required preliminary courses
Admission to the programme.
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Learning outcomes
After completing the course, the student should have the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and general competence:
Knowledge
The student
- can understand human reactions after challenging life experiences and crises, and the significance of these based on recognised mental health care theory
- can described the user/patient and next of kin’s legal rights, and health personnel and the health service’s obligations
- can apply relational and care theory to analyse how attitudes and communication affect relationships and care
- can explain existential dimensions related to hope and meaning in mental health care
Skills
The student
- can apply relational knowledge to see things in light of the user/patient and next of kin’s life situation
- can facilitate targeted communication and cooperation with users/patients and next of kin
- can analyse the connection between treatment models and work methods to promote the mental health of users/patients
- can assess and discuss professional, legal and ethical aspects with users/patients, next of kin and their collaborative partners
General competence
The student
- can actively contribute to patient-oriented mental health care adapted to the individual, regardless of background, culture and nationality
- can support, guide and cooperate with users/patients and next of kin to enable targeted promotion of health and quality of life
- can analyse and adjust their own professional practice based on their preconceptions and new knowledge
- can contribute to expanding knowledge, insight and openness to promote mental health
- can actively contribute to more openness and less stigma associated with mental health complaints
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Teaching and learning methods
Language of instruction: Norwegian
The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the framework conditions, theory and research in mental health care.
Research, treatment, care and preventive work with people with mental health conditions requires an interdisciplinary understanding and approach. The course discusses basic concepts such as mental health, mental health complaints, substance abuse and dependency problems related to mental health care. It has an emphasis on a biopsychosocial model for individually-adapted prevention and care across disciplines and different mental health complaints, substance abuse and dependency problems. Ethical aspects and the relationship between mental health care workers and users/patients will be thematised throughout the course.
Master's Degree Programme in Health Sciences - specialisation in Mental Healthcare and Advanced Programme in Mental Health Care is carried out jointly.
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Course requirements
Admission to the programme.
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Assessment
After completing the course, the student should have the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and general competence:
Knowledge
The student
- can discuss theories, models and methods used in mental health care practice
- can assess the purpose of and challenges relating to classification and diagnosis systems for mental health complaints
- can identify key vulnerability and risk factors relating to mental health problems from a biopsychosocial perspective
- can describe and assess the development of mental healthcare services for users, patients and next of kin
- can critically assess the individual’s right to autonomy and user participation, and is familiar with important ethical problems and considerations in the development of equitable health services
- can assess the overarching conditions that are significant to improvement processes in mental health care
Skills
The student
- can disseminate core theoretical and research-based knowledge in the field in writing and orally
- can participate in academic and health and social policy discussions that promote knowledge about the field of mental health, and can communicate the user/patient's perspective
- can critically assess health and social policy, and legal and financial framework conditions for working in mental health care
- can analyse empirical data, theory and research that deal with development, vulnerability, protection and consequences of mental health complaints
- can demonstrate thorough professional insight and understanding of individual users/patients, families and networks
- can analyse their own profession’s contribution to interdisciplinary cooperation at various levels and can apply this knowledge in the coordination of user-oriented services
- can apply academic literature and research in their own development project
General competence
The student
- can integrate the UN Sustainable Development Goals on good health and well-being, and less inequality in ethical and professional problems related to mental health and mental health complaints, including substance abuse and dependency problems
- can analyse the relationship between the individual, service and societal levels when planning mental health care
- can reflect and contribute to discussions based on professional and research knowledge, user knowledge and experiential knowledge
- can disseminate relevant problems, analyses and research results in a way that meets research ethics requirements
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Permitted exam materials and equipment
The course will use varied, student-active work methods. It includes e-learning modules, study groups, lectures, seminars and self-study. Compulsory lectures covering the syllabus are used to present subject matter, with discussions and written coursework requirements.
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Grading scale
The following must have been approved in order for the student to take the examination:
- Participation in compulsory activities, 80% participation in study groups and seminars.
- A written assignment carried out individually or in groups. Scope of 2,500 words (+/- 20%).
- Completed e-learning module
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Examiners
Project examination in the form of an individual written assignment with a scope of 4,000 words (+/- 20%).
Resit examination: If the student is awarded the grade F (fails the written assignment), he/she will be given one (1) opportunity to submit a reworked version.
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Overlapping courses
All aids are permitted, as long as the rules for source referencing are complied with.