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Home > News > Education

NMC reintroduces paid clinical placements and emergency standards for student nurses

The regulator has also introduced two additional emergency standards relating to first-year nursing and midwifery students.


14 January 2021
Student nurse in hallway

Shutterstock

Student nurses can opt into a paid extended clinical placement to help with the UK’s pandemic response.

The Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) has today announced it will reintroduce emergency education standards to enable final year nursing students to opt-in to support the response to the Covid-19 pandemic, via extended clinical placement.



This decision follows a request from the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, supported by the Chief Executive of the NHS in England, in response to the continuing, intense pressures of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The NMC has also introduced two additional emergency standards relating to first-year nursing and midwifery students and supervision and assessment in practice.

Over half of student nurses who undertook a paid clinical placement last year told NursingNotes that they would not do this again if asked. A lack of support and the negative impact on their studies was cited as the main reasons for this. A massive 29% said they failed to achieve their learning outcomes on time.

What are the new arrangements?

The NMC has made the emergency standards available to use in each country but they are not mandatory for any individual country, region, institution or student – there may be some local variation on arrangements.


For nursing students in their final year: Where these standards are adopted locally, students can opt into a paid clinical placement while the standards are in place. Universities will need to work with students to make sure they’ve met all necessary requirements and learning outcomes to join the NMC register. Students who opt into paid clinical placements will not have protected supernumerary status.

Where final-years students opt-out of a paid clinical placement, universities should attempt to continue the course as previously scheduled.

For nursing and midwifery students in their first year: While the preference is for first-year students to continue with their practice placements, this may not be possible in some regions of the UK. The NMC has therefore reinstated the emergency standard which enables first-year nursing and midwifery students to focus on academic and online learning rather than participating in clinical placements while the system is under pressure due to the pandemic.

For all other student nurses and midwifery students alongside post-graduate diploma/masters students:  This group will continue with their studies as planned and the emergency education standards allowing extended clinical placements will not apply to these programmes. These students on placements will continue to have supernumerary status.


This package of measures will mean education organisations across all four countries of the UK are being provided with as much flexibility as possible in how they deliver their courses, while also allowing those final year students who want to support the response to the pandemic to be able to do so.

Unprecedented strain.

Andrea Sutcliffe CBE, Chief Executive and Registrar for the NMC, said, “Today’s students are tomorrow’s registered nurses and midwives and it’s vital we support them to complete their education. But we recognise the health and care services in the UK are under unprecedented strain.

“The changes we’ve made today will enable students to continue learning, while at the same time, allowing those student nurses in their final year to contribute to the fight against Covid-19 where they wish to do so.

“I’m enormously grateful to each and every student for coping with such change and disruption to their studies at this challenging time. Their dedication and hard work fills me with enormous pride and hope for the future.

“I look forward to welcoming them onto our permanent register as registered professionals in the months and years to come.”



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