The Sunday Post (Inverness)

With honours: Salute for student nurses

Open University hails trainees who joined pandemic frontline

- By Sally Mcdonald smcdonald@sundaypost.com Nominate today at rcn.org.uk/scotawards

They were angels in waiting, student nurses who, with little thought for their own safety, opted to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Scotland’s frontline NHS staff as Covid hit.

Tomorrow they will step on to the stage at Glasgow Royal Concert Hall to collect their degrees in the Open University’s first in-person ceremony since 2019, as 24 BSC graduates who should have graduated in 2020 and 2021 will finally be able to celebrate their achievemen­ts.

Students like Kilmarnock mum-of-three Julie Plenderlei­th, 51, who was grieving the loss of her dad to a brain tumour when she stepped up to care for Covid patients and is the latest dedicated nurse to be nominated for The Sunday Post’s People’s Choice award in the Royal College of Nursing Scotland’s Awards.

She told The Sunday Post: “I did this for my dad, for my colleagues, and most of all for the patients who needed us. I only wish my dad could be there to see me graduate and also see me nominated for this award. He would have been so proud. I will be wearing the dress I wore to his funeral to my graduation. It’s my way of having him with me.”

Susan Stewart, director of the Open University in Scotland, said: “The achievemen­ts of our pandemic nursing graduates are quite remarkable. Not only have they studied while being on the frontline during the Covid-19 pandemic, but they’ve overcome their own personal struggles on their journeys to becoming qualified nurses. They have shown extraordin­ary determinat­ion in achieving their goals.”

Plenderlei­th, who already holds an Honours degree in psychology and a Masters in mental health from Glasgow Caledonian University, decided to fulfil her childhood ambition of becoming a nurse when she saw first-hand the care her father Jim Plenderlei­th, 77, received at the University Hospital Crosshouse – where she is now a staff nurse – when he became critically ill.

The flexibilit­y of the OU meant the mum to Mark, 32, Hope, 23, and Brooke, 11, could continue to work full-time as a nursing assistant in its stroke unit while studying with online tutorials completed at home. Tragically, her dad died halfway through the course. She almost gave up but was encouraged to continue by her line manager.

Plenderlei­th said: “The Open University offered me the chance to opt in as a Band 4 student staff nurse to help the NHS cope with the added pressures of nursing Covid patients. Instantly I accepted.

“There was nothing to think about. I was going to be that nurse. I wanted to acquire all those skills and experience and to care for those who affected not only by stroke, but also Covid.

“But I was fearful. I was worried I would take the virus home to my family and that myself or a family member might lose their life to the disease. I was worried about my widowed 81-year-old mother Sadie. She is my childminde­r.

We couldn’t mix households. We couldn’t risk her safety and she spent lockdown alone.”

She added: “A new type of nursing emerged where I wore full PPE or face masks, visors, long-sleeve aprons and gloves to care for Covid-positive patients and isolating patients.

“You are supporting patients through their last breaths, holding their hands and talking to them, the way you might to your own loved ones. And that is tragic.

“It took me back to the loss of my dad but you want to provide the care to that patient in the same way you would want your own family to be treated.”

She experience­d the disease herself in December 2020, just before Christmas. “The vaccine had just come out and I was meant to get it when I became ill,” she said.

“I felt as if I had been hit by a truck. I couldn’t get out of bed. I was ill for three weeks in total and in bed for five days. I did fear at one point that I might not make it.”

Plenderlei­th now plans to study for a Masters degree in advanced clinical practice with the OU, and aspires to become a tutor for its adult nursing Honours degree programme.

The Sunday Post’s People’s Choice Award is a wonderful opportunit­y for everyone to thank a nurse, midwife or nursing support worker who has gone above and beyond the call of duty to improve a patient’s life and care.

Julie Lamberth, RCN Scotland board chair, said: “All the nomination­s we receive will demonstrat­e how nursing staff go the extra mile to provide highqualit­y nursing care, day in day out, for the people of Scotland.”

 ?? ?? Julie Plenderlei­th, now a staff nurse at Crosshouse Hospital in Kilmarnock, cared for Covid patients as a student nurse
Julie Plenderlei­th, now a staff nurse at Crosshouse Hospital in Kilmarnock, cared for Covid patients as a student nurse

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