About the Service
Join a purpose-built, independent rehabilitation service providing high-quality, person-centred care for adults with complex mental health needs — including acquired brain injury, personality disorder, and severe mental illness. Our approach focuses on rehabilitation, recovery, and community reintegration, empowering individuals to achieve meaningful progress and long-term wellbeing.
Role Overview
As a Registered Mental Health Nurse (RMN), you'll deliver compassionate, recovery-focused care within a multidisciplinary team. You'll assess, plan, implement, and evaluate care plans while maintaining a positive, therapeutic environment that upholds dignity and empowerment.
Key Responsibilities
* Deliver high-quality, evidence-based nursing care in line with recovery principles.
* Conduct comprehensive assessments, risk management, and care planning.
* Safely administer and monitor medication in line with NMC standards.
* Support service users in developing independence and life skills.
* Maintain accurate and compliant clinical documentation.
* Apply PMVA principles to safely manage challenging behaviours.
* Liaise with families, carers, and external professionals to promote continuity of care.
* Engage in reflective practice, supervision, and ongoing professional development.
Requirements
Essential:
* Registered Nurse (Mental Health) with current NMC pin.
* Experience with adults with complex mental health needs, personality disorder, or acquired brain injury.
* PMVA training (or willingness to undertake).
* Strong communication, teamwork, and interpersonal skills.
* Commitment to person-centred and recovery-oriented care.
Desirable:
* Experience in rehabilitation, forensic, or secure settings.
* Knowledge of trauma-informed and positive behaviour support approaches.
What We Offer
* Comprehensive induction and ongoing training.
* Supportive multidisciplinary team culture.
* Opportunities for career progression.
* Regular clinical supervision and reflective practice.
* A service ethos built on compassion, dignity, and recovery
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