Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Higher education

Talk to other parents whose children are preparing for university on our Higher Education forum.

Changes to NHS funding for student nurses

8 replies

TheStarLightExpress · 14/03/2016 09:45

I would like to retrain as a Mental Health nurse in 2018 (currently pregnant). I had found a graduate entry Masters course to do this (as I already have a degree) which would be my preference, or of course doing the standard undergraduate degree if I wasn't accepted. I'm now concerned about the changes to funding though- I know that previous study didn't affect funding due to it being NHS (and not student loans company) but this is apparently due to change in 2017?

Any info would be much appreciated! Flowers

OP posts:
titchy · 14/03/2016 15:49

There's an exemption - you're fine.

TheStarLightExpress · 14/03/2016 17:36

Thanks Titchy, I had tried looking and not got anywhere.. Do you know if that's for the MA as well? I know the NHS paid those fees but you couldn't get a student finance loan

OP posts:
titchy · 14/03/2016 18:48

Masters courses will be covered by the new PG loans of £10k for fees and maintenance as far as I know.

rightsaidfrederickII · 14/03/2016 22:54

The details aren't finalised yet, but it looks like these courses will be exempted from the rules about funding for people who already have a degree. This is about the best info out there at the moment. www.councilofdeans.org.uk/2015/11/the-2015-spending-review-changes-to-nursing-midwifery-and-ahp-education-background-information-for-students/

calisha · 16/05/2016 19:14

I work at a university that does a 2 yr Masters pre registration nursing programme - obviously we are interested in the funding available to post grad students post 2017.

Although it's still out for consultation what we DO know is that there is now a post grad student loan system that gives up to £10K - you would need to cover fees and living expenses with that.

You could still undertake a traditional 3 yr UG programme and access student loans though

WhoTheFuckIsSimon · 16/05/2016 19:18

I thought from 2017 you have to pay 9k a year tuition fees?

calisha · 16/05/2016 19:22

Yes for 9K Undergraduate degrees - it's not clear how much a PG degree will cost. The PG loan system is different to UG

AndYourBirdCanSing · 21/05/2016 20:04

Calisha do you think it's likely that the loan would fully cover the fees?

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread