Bologna Process, More or Less: Nursing Education in the European Economic Area: A Discussion Paper

Author:

Palese Alvisa1,Zabalegui Adelaida2,Sigurdardottir Arun K.3,Bergin Michael4,Dobrowolska Beata5,Gasser Catherine6,Pajnkihar Majda7,Jackson Christine8

Affiliation:

1. 1Associate Professor in Nursing Science, University of Udine, Viale Ungheria 20, 33100 Udine, Italy

2. 2Director of Nursing at Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, Spain

3. 3Professor, Dean of School of Health Sciences, University of Akureyri, Iceland

4. 4Lecturer in Nursing, Department of Nursing, School of Health Sciences, Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland

5. 5Teacher (adjunct), Medical University of Lublin, Faculty of Nursing and Health Science, Chair of Nursing Development, Lublin, Poland

6. 6Lecturer in Nursing, High School of Health Sciences, University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland, Fribourg, Switzerland

7. 7Associate Professor, Dean, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Maribor, Slovenia

8. 8Principal Research Fellow, Faculty of Health, Life and Social Sciences, University of Lincoln, UK

Abstract

AbstractThe Bologna Declaration and the subsequent processes is the single most important reform of higher education taking place in Europe in the last 30 years. Signed in 1999, it includes 46 European Union countries and aimed to create, a more coherent, compatible, comparable and competitive European Higher Education Area. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the Bologna Declaration achievements in nursing education at 2010 within eight countries that first signed the Declaration on 1999. Researchers primarily identified national laws, policy statements, guidelines and grey literature; then, a literature review on Bologna Declaration implementation in nursing was conducted on the Medline and CINAHL databases. Critical analyses of these documents were performed by expert nurse educators. Structural, organizational, functional and cultural obstacles are hindering full Bologna Process implementation in nursing education within European Economic Area. A call for action is offered in order to achieve a functionally unified system within nursing.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Education,General Nursing

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