Mental Health Nursing Award
RCN Scotland Nurse of the Year Awards
Mental health nurses are key to promoting and supporting recovery, helping patients and clients to live independent and fulfilling lives. They build effective relationships with service users and their relatives and carers.
About the award
Open to registered nurses working in mental health services. This award aims to recognise those who have succeeded in raising standards of care for their patients and clients and have made an outstanding contribution to the care of service users.
Who can be nominated?
A registered mental health nurse working in a clinical role or managing clinical services within mental health services across Scotland.
Criteria:
The nominee should clearly demonstrate:
- a commitment to person-centred care, innovation and delivering high quality services that make a difference to the people receiving care
- the positive impact of their work for patients, families and colleagues
- the use of a credible evidence base and/or developing an evidence base to underpin the work for which they are being nominated
- how their work contributes to the delivery of local and national policy and strategy within health and social care.
Nominations have now closed and, following the judging process, our finalists have been chosen by our panels.
If you have any questions or queries regarding the awards, please get in touch by emailing scotlandnurseawards@rcn.org.uk
What makes a winner
Melissa Rowlands
Dementia ANP, Psychiatry of the Older Adult, St Johns Hospital, NHS Lothian
Described by colleagues as a committed advance nurse practitioner (ANP), Melissa developed the role of the ANP in dementia care to enhance patient care and reduce referral to diagnosis. She developed a service which sought to prevent admission and reduce readmission to hospital for people with dementia in care homes. By developing nurse led clinics, Melissa supports West Lothian’s contribution to national HEAT targets by reducing waiting times for diagnosis. She adopts a flexible approach to ensure that the service works across older people’s health services as well as supporting other agencies. Adopting a home first model of care, Melissa strives to deliver as much care at home – providing a complex supported discharge service. Within a year, the waiting times in her area had halved, allowing the post diagnostic support teams to engage faster with patients. Melissa’s approach is already being shared across Scotland and she is now supporting ANPs in other areas to implement her initiative. Melissa is keen to demonstrate to senior management what nursing staff can do when given scope to be innovative in their care delivery.
Page last updated - 31/10/2023