Part time
9 months
SEP-24
Postgraduate Certificate
Drug Medicine Control (Nursing) Paramedical Services / Supplementary Medicine Health Studies Medical Sciences
Taught
Overview
This course aims to prepare you with the knowledge, understanding and skills to prescribe safely, appropriately and cost-effectively as an independent and supplementary prescriber. It is intended for
This course is run at the West London campus, but it is also offered at our Berkshire Institute for Health in Reading.
Course detail
This new course reflects the current climate in healthcare where a range of health professionals acquire the knowledge and skills to manage an entire clinical episode, both non-pharmacologically and pharmacologically, of a patient’s presentation.
This clinically-focused award has been designed to have significant impact on your practice.
Learning methods
Learning will take place in a multi-professional environment that will value your prior knowledge, skills and life experience. It will encompass:
learning in University with other professional groups (nurses, midwives, paramedics, physiotherapists)
learning in profession-specific groups
practice-based learning in your area of work or placements organised by your employer.
We use a wide range of approaches to learning and teaching, including:
Assessment
The module assessments are designed to fit the learning outcomes of the course and meet the requirements of your professional body. They will enable you to demonstrate you are consistently competent and capable of the role, both academically and in real-life complex and dynamic service environments.
Career progression for a paramedic or physiotherapist
Successful completion of this course will lead to eligibility for a paramedic/physiotherapist to become annotated with the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC) as an independent and supplementary prescriber.
Career progression for a nurse, midwife or specialist community public health nurse
Successful completion of this course will lead to eligibility for a nurse / midwife / specialist community public health nurse to become annotated with the Nursing and Midwifery Council as an independent and supplementary prescriber.
This is sometimes known as a ‘V300’, from the code that is used to enter the annotation onto the NMC register indicating successful completion of a NMC-approved prescribing programme that gives the registrant independent/ supplementary prescriber status.
For this course (per year)
£2,700
To be confirmed
Entry requirements for HCPC Registrants (paramedics and physiotherapists only): You must hold a degree from a UK university or equivalent or, in the case of non-graduates, be able to demonstrate equivalent academic ability and professional experience.
The University of West London (UWL) is known as the ‘career university’ due its high graduate employment rate. All postgraduate courses at UWL are specifically designed to enable students to thrive in successful future careers across both academia and industry. UWL has invested £150m in its campus in recent years. New state-of-the-art facilities accessible to postgraduate students include a radio studio, performance spaces, industry-leading...more
Full time | 2 years | SEP-24
Full time | 2 years | APR-24
Part time | 1 year | SEP-24
Full time | 2 years | SEP-24
Part time | 3 years | 20-SEP-24