Nurses - Ask 5 complimentary questions
I received an email from RCNi subject heading - 'Q. What questions are nurses asking?'
An invitation to sign-up and ask five free questions: https://rcni.com/ask
Question 1
Is there a model of care, or nursing that encompasses the sciences, mental health, sociology and political domains of care?
- Social Model of Health: This model focuses on salutogenesis, examining what contributes to health rather than just illness, by considering broad social, economic, environmental, and cultural influences on an individual's well-being .
- Person-Centred Nursing Framework: This framework extends beyond individual biological health to include the person's intricate cultural context, family, spirituality, and life experiences, defining health as encompassing intellectual, social, and spiritual dimensions .
- Biopsychosocial Model of Care: This approach integrates biological, psychological, and social factors to address a patient's holistic needs, moving beyond the biomedical model's sole focus on physical illness .
- Dual Registration Degrees: Educational programmes for nurses and social workers combine life sciences with social work principles, law, and policy, preparing professionals to understand factors influencing health, social justice, structural inequalities, and anti-discriminatory practises .
- Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) Care Model: While not a nursing model itself, the MDT approach enhances patient care by integrating expertise from various professionals, including specialist doctors, nurses, psychology counsellors, dietitians, and pharmacists, to deliver individualised treatment plans and coordinate care .
Question 2
What model of care has the conceptual scope to critique parity of esteem in mental health nursing?
- Biopsychosocial Model: This model offers a conceptual framework to critique parity of esteem by considering biological, psychological, and social factors in a patient's health, aiming for holistic needs rather than just biological ones . It contrasts with the biomedical model, which has historically led to paternalistic decision-making in healthcare .
- Culturally Sensitive and Competent Care: Essential for critiquing parity of esteem, culturally sensitive care requires nurses to appreciate diverse cultures and adopt personalised, flexible approaches to mental health support . Culturally competent care, underpinned by equality and diversity principles, involves behaviours and attitudes that value patients' diverse backgrounds, improving satisfaction and outcomes .
- Person Centred Care: This approach is crucial for addressing the historical paternalism in healthcare, ensuring patients participate in decisions about their care and re viewed as individuals with unique experiences rather than just labels or symptoms . Recent mental health reforms, such as the Mental Health Bill 2025, aim to embed person-centred and equitable care further .
- Holistic Care: The Nursing and Midwifery Council (2024) emphasises assessing spiritual needs to provide effective holistic care, recognising that "seeing the whole person supports better care" . This aligns with the biopsychosocial model's aim to meet holistic needs and challenges the organisational and practice divisions between mental and physical healthcare .

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