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Volume 2, Issue 3 (Suppl)

Adv Practice Nurs, an open access journal

ISSN: 2573-0347

Nursing Practice 2017

September 04-06, 2017

September 04-06, 2017 | Edinburgh, Scotland

Advanced Nursing Practice

30

th

World Congress on

Post qualifying clinical doctoral education for nurses

Tracey Harding

University of Southampton, England

M

anley (1996) subscribed to the notion of advanced practice as that which advances nursing practice encompassing the role

of educator, researcher and consultant, promoting and developing clinical nursing from clinical to strategic and policy levels

effectively driving patient and health care delivery. However, deficits in the development of research leadership, capacity and capability

among healthcare professionals within the United Kingdom (UK) were reported. Leadership education and research remained key

to advanced practice. Rapid change within the health and social care arena has meant that more sophisticated knowledge and skills

related to service/practice design and redevelopment as well as governance are required. The document published in December 2015,

‘Delivering the Forward View: NHS planning guidance’, refers to research and its improvement within the NHS, in implementing

research proposals and initiatives, leadership of service developments. The Doctorate in Clinical Practice (DClinP) programme

places emphasis on strengthening clinical practice alongside research leadership, building on existing expertise focussing on practice

in health and social care, promoting contribution made to meeting global contemporary health and social care challenges, thereby

improving patient outcomes. Within the last five years, approximately 24 students have been awarded a doctorate. The impact of

clinical and research leadership training is evident. Practitioners have talked about being aware of a whole new world of research

and academic practice, and the wider career opportunities available. The strength of the programme and its impact is in advancing

practice through its rich mix of intellectual stimulation increasing research capacity and research-led practice.

Biography

Tracey Harding completed her Doctorate in Clinical Practice in 2015 from the University of Southampton. She is the lead for the doctoral programmes within the

Faculty of Health Sciences, which include the Clinical Doctorate, the PhD as well as an integrated PhD and Clinical Doctoral Fellowship schemes. She is currently

writing her research for publication, a psychosocial study of alcohol and families, with other examples of publications from previous research on leadership and

decision making and a discussion paper on binge drinking and cognitive impairment. She is a Member of the Research sub-committee of a National Charity.

t.a.harding@soton.ac.uk

Tracey Harding, Adv Practice Nurs 2017, 2:3(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2573-0347-C1-005