Harrison, Joanne
(2025)
How do nurses experience and perceive the Nursing and Midwifery Council revalidation approach in relation to assurance of post-qualification maintenance of quality standards?
PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
Abstract
Background
The way in which healthcare professionals are held to account for their clinical care standards has received critical attention following the publication of several inquiries into failings within the United Kingdom’s (UK) National Health Service (NHS). This resulted in a parliamentary directive to strengthen the oversight arrangements of healthcare professionals’ regulation for education, practice standards and appropriateness for inclusion on professionally accredited registers. As a result, the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), the regulator for nursing and midwifery, launched its ‘revalidation’ approach in April 2016.
Nursing and midwifery professional regulation continues to be scrutinised due to regulation challenges identified within the Coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic and the identification of egregious criminal acts by a regulated healthcare worker. This has prompted further inquiry into NMC governance arrangements and called into question the rigour of its professional regulation.
Studies of healthcare professions’ revalidation approaches have focused
on the experience within medicine, which was the first UK healthcare
profession to commence with revalidation in 2012. These studies have
highlighted diverse findings, from positive reports such as revalidation
promoting professionalism through to concerns that revalidation
represents an infringement on professional autonomy. To date, limited
studies have focused on nurses’ experiences and perceptions of
revalidation. Although the medical and nursing professions share
commonalities, such as degree-level entry to each profession and the
provision of care and services within the health sector, significant
sociocultural, ethical and historical differences necessitate the
consideration of nursing separately. Nursing is the largest healthcare
professional group in the UK. However, limited studies have explored
nurses’ experience of revalidation, their views of its aims to promote
ii
patient safety and assure the quality of nursing care and how they
engage with it as a process.
This study aimed to develop an understanding of UK NMC registered
nurses’ experience and perceptions of revalidation, with specific
reference to its ambition of assuring its registrants post-qualification
maintenance of quality standards and nurses’ engagement with it as a
process. The theory of the sociology of the professions provided a
framework for this study. Sociology of the professions is a complex field
of study, one which is not linear in its discourse and traverses different
interpretations and concepts. This study has adopted the neo-Weberian
tradition from the sociology of the professions’ theory, specifically
Larson’s concept of the ‘professional project’, which has utility in
understanding how professions seek, develop and re-negotiate their
autonomy and social closure.
Methodology and Methods
This study adopted an interpretivist standpoint, utilising a social
constructionism approach. Through purposive sampling, participants
were recruited from across the UK using X (formally Twitter). Eligibility
was defined as nurses who were registered with the NMC and had
undergone at least one revalidation cycle. Data were collected using in�depth Microsoft Teams interviews (37 participants). Data were analysed
inductively using a thematic approach. Ethical approval was gained from
the University of Nottingham Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Research Ethics Committee.
Findings
The findings suggest that participants did not value the assurance aim of
revalidation due to their belief that the process lacked rigour. However,
their commitment to revalidation was attributed to its gateway role in
maintaining nurses’ registration with the professional regulator and ability
iii
to work as a registered nurse. Participants described a spectrum of
engagement1
that portrayed their values and behaviours concerning
revalidation. These ranged from values and behaviours typified as
disingenuous (the gamers), tokenistic (the pragmatists) and explicit
engagement (the by the book), through to a more creative style of
engagement, pushing traditional approaches (the pirates). These values
translated into diverse operational styles in terms of revalidation
engagement. These included the positive perceptions of absorption,
normalisation and appropriation. These terms described how participants
understood revalidation as part of their professional work, made
revalidation part of their everyday professional activities and/or
repurposed it for broader professional purposes where appropriate.
Dissonance, as a negative perception of revalidation engagement, was
broadly attributed to participants’ assertion that revalidation lacked
processual rigour.
A further factor influencing engagement was the perceived availability (or
non-availability) of revalidation support from within the employing
organisations and the regulator. This study uniquely identified how
participants harnessed their agency to create opportunities within their
working activity to engage with revalidation, termed the permissive
space.
These findings align with the neo-Weberian scholarly concepts of social
agency and how professionals seek to preserve autonomy over their
work. Participants engaged with revalidation to maintain their registration
to work, but how and when it was engaged with was demonstrated in
individual ways.
1
Italics are used the first time a concept is referred to in either the abstract or the
body of the document
iv
Conclusions
The study supports the understanding of how nurses experience and
perceive the regulatory approach of revalidation through Larson’s
concept of the professional project. The requirement to engage with
revalidation is non-negotiable; to work as a nurse, revalidation is the
gateway which enables maintenance of the necessary registration. In
maintaining their registration, nurses demonstrated how revalidation was
engaged with, both individually and on behalf of teams they were
responsible for, as a professional project activity. Through revalidation
engagement, Larson’s professional project concept highlights how
nurses strived to attain the state-sanctioned monopoly of registration (the
economic order) and respectability, status, and trust of the public (the
social order). Recommendations support the strengthening of
revalidation as a regulatory process to benefit both the regulator and the
public. Recommendations that support nurses (and wider registrants) in
their experience of engaging with revalidation as a professional activity
are identified.
| Item Type: |
Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
(PhD)
|
| Supervisors: |
Moffatt, Fiona Spendlove, Zoey |
| Keywords: |
Nursing and Midwifery Council; Professional regulation; Revalidation engagement; Nurses; Quality of healthcare; Regulatory process |
| Subjects: |
W Medicine and related subjects (NLM Classification) > WY Nursing |
| Faculties/Schools: |
UK Campuses > Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences > School of Health Sciences UK Campuses > Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences > School of Nursing |
| Item ID: |
82381 |
| Depositing User: |
Harrison, Joanne
|
| Date Deposited: |
31 Dec 2025 04:40 |
| Last Modified: |
31 Dec 2025 04:40 |
| URI: |
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/id/eprint/82381 |
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