News3 mins ago
Training To Be A Midwife In The 56'/60's?
28 Answers
Two of my friends are having a difference of opinion about this, one says that you had to qualify to be an SRN before you could begin training to be a midwife and the other says that you could just start training immediately, as I think you can do today by doing a midwifery degree. Can anyone clarify please as I can't find any info on the internet it and I told them AB would know :0)
Answers
Sqad - "Half of the posters have "misread the question." " I misread the title as Training to be a Murderer... What is wrong with me?!
08:50 Thu 02nd Oct 2014
You are both right, rosy. If you are starting from scratch, you do the full degree course - if you are already a registered nurse, you can do a shorter course. It's all here http:// www.nhs careers .nhs.uk /explor e-by-ca reer/mi dwifery /traini ng-to-b e-a-mid wife/
Recollect - I am a little younger than W
that there were two courses - one shorter and more practical and needed less qualifications SEN
and SRN - longer, needing qualifications
and SRN before the other courses Midwives and RSCN registered sick children's nurse.
I remember theatre sister pointing to one SEN when I started 1986
and said: "that SEN could run these theatres standing on her head"
( and now she is a modern matron )
Nursing degrees really started with Project 2000.
nick named even by th consumers Reject 2000
that there were two courses - one shorter and more practical and needed less qualifications SEN
and SRN - longer, needing qualifications
and SRN before the other courses Midwives and RSCN registered sick children's nurse.
I remember theatre sister pointing to one SEN when I started 1986
and said: "that SEN could run these theatres standing on her head"
( and now she is a modern matron )
Nursing degrees really started with Project 2000.
nick named even by th consumers Reject 2000
No they had to convert
There was a conversion course
The SEN - she who could run theatres and then eventually did
went through that route
I was adding colour to an otherwise bald narrative
triggered by the fight and in-fighting linked to the edict in Manchester that every nurse in a children's hospital had to be er RSCN .....
The service couldnt be run without the learners (!)
which presumably was the same in the Labour wards
in which case of course non-midwives were delivering pregnant women, under suitable supervision of course.
There was a conversion course
The SEN - she who could run theatres and then eventually did
went through that route
I was adding colour to an otherwise bald narrative
triggered by the fight and in-fighting linked to the edict in Manchester that every nurse in a children's hospital had to be er RSCN .....
The service couldnt be run without the learners (!)
which presumably was the same in the Labour wards
in which case of course non-midwives were delivering pregnant women, under suitable supervision of course.