Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing

2023 Deakin University Handbook

Note: You are seeing the 2023 view of this course information. These details may no longer be current. [Go to the current version]
Year

2023 course information

Award granted Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing
Course Map

This course map is for new students commencing from Semester 1 2023.

This course map is for new students commencing from Semester 2 2023.

Course maps for commencement in previous years are available on the Course Maps webpage or please contact a Student Adviser in Student Central.

Campus

This course is only offered Online

OnlineYes
Duration

1 year part-time study
Note: This course is only available part-time

Deakin course codeH565
Approval status

This course is approved by the University under the Higher Education Standards Framework.

Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) recognition

The award conferred upon completion is recognised in the Australian Qualifications Framework at Level 8.

Course sub-headings

Course overview

Cardiovascular diseases cause 27% of deaths in Australia.* As a registered nurse, Deakin’s Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing will equip you with the analytical, practical, communication and leadership skills needed to be a high-performing member of a multidisciplinary health team across a range of specialist cardiac settings. 

Our School of Nursing and Midwifery has state-of-the-art facilities and is one of Australia’s most established and largest. Ranked 20th in the world, the School’s cutting-edge research is recognised as well above world standard.# Our strong industry connections mean you will be guided through world-class course work by experts in cardiac care nursing.

Are you ready to be part of the future of cardiac care?

If you want to take the next step in your nursing career, our Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing prepares you to practise effectively at an advanced practice level in cardiac care settings. As a graduate you will demonstrate ethical, safe, high-quality, expert clinical decision-making abilities within an interdisciplinary team, and psychomotor skills commensurate with specialised theoretical knowledge, evidence-based practice and person-centred care.

Deakin’s strong industry connections ensure a high level of collaboration and support during your clinical practice. This means that while you study you can immerse yourself in your specialty practice area with one of our numerous metropolitan, rural and regional health partners across Australia.

Our innovative online program delivers a rich, interactive and empowering learning experience designed for postgraduate nurses. Live-streaming seminars and class discussions will encourage critical thinking, problem solving and teamwork skills. Australia’s top-rated tech support and access to our expert teaching staff means you can learn at your own pace, when and where it suits you, without compromising quality or support.

This course enables you to:

  • evaluate and intervene in response to complex data from patient and technologically-derived sources
  • develop an advanced understanding of normal physiology, and the pathophysiology of illness and injury of critically ill patients
  • perform focused, systematic and methodical patient assessments
  • demonstrate advanced clinical judgement leading to autonomous decision-making
  • assess and manage patients with a variety of complex cardiovascular conditions
  • understand the risk management and quality nursing care required for cardiac patients undergoing interventional procedures
  • explore advanced interventional treatment modalities.

Graduates are prepared to handle the contemporary challenges nurses may face in cardiac nursing and interventional cardiology with a course that responds to industry trends and demands. You will learn how to make a difference through roles in areas such as practice, education, leadership and research.

*Australian Government, Department of Health and Aged Care. 
^2022 ShanghaiRankings Ranking of Academic Subjects.
#Excellence in Research Australia (ERA) 2018.

Indicative student workload

As a student in the Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing you can expect to participate in a range of teaching and learning activities each week. You will attend on-line synchronous study days and complete asynchronous guided learning modules. There are also additional self-directed study commitments to complete both university and clinical assessment tasks.

Professional recognition

Nurses employed under the Victorian public hospital award receive a higher duties allowance for postgraduate qualifications relevant to their practice.

Career opportunities

With job growth of 13.9% projected for registered nurses by 2026,** there is an industry demand for nurses with sophisticated specialty skills. Our Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing will allow you to meet that demand in advanced practice, leadership, management and education across a range of settings including: 

  • acute cardiac units
  • cardiac catheter laboratories
  • coronary care units 
  • clinical nurse educator
  • cardiac rehabilitation and community care. 

**2021 Employment Outlook - for the five years to November 2026, Australian Government National Skills Commission


Clinical practice

To undertake this course you must independently secure employment of at least 24 hours per week in a cardiac care setting within a collaborating hospital in Australia.

Articulated courses

Fees and charges

Fees and charges vary depending on your course, the type of fee place you hold, your commencement year, the units you choose and your study load.

Use the Fee estimator to see course and unit fees applicable to your course and type of place. Further information regarding tuition fees, other fees and charges, invoice due dates, withdrawal dates, payment methods is available on our Current students fees website.

Course Learning Outcomes

Graduate Learning Outcomes

Course Learning Outcomes

Discipline-specific knowledge and capabilities

Demonstrate safe psychomotor skills and clinical practice commensurate with cardiac care nursing theoretical knowledge, evidence-based practice and person-centred care.

Communication

Demonstrate communication skills to develop and implement plans of care to ensure the delivery of quality, safe nursing care to patients in the cardiac care setting.

Digital literacy

Evaluate information using digital technologies to effectively disseminate relevant cardiac care information to patients and/or the multidisciplinary team

Critical thinking

Identify and evaluate complex data from multiple sources to inform clinical decision making in the cardiac care setting.

Problem solving

Apply specialised nursing knowledge and skills to routine and complex problems in the cardiac care setting to optimise patient outcomes.

Self-management

Demonstrate professionalism, accountability, reflection, and personal autonomy as a cardiac nurse

Teamwork

Establish and maintain inclusive, collaborative professional relationships with all members of the multidisciplinary team.

Global citizenship

Display accountability for, and sound professional judgement in behaviours that uphold ethical principles of practice within diverse social, cultural, and environmental contexts.

Course rules

To complete the Graduate Certificate of Cardiac Nursing, students must attain 4 credit points of core (compulsory) units, taken over one year of part-time study.

Both the theoretical and clinical components of the assessment for each unit must be passed in order to successfully gain an overall pass in this course. Compulsory clinical hurdles form part of the assessment of this course. 

Note: Failure of a compulsory clinical component in a unit will normally lead to exclusion.

All commencing Faculty of Health course work students are required to complete HAI010 Academic Integrity in their first trimester of study (0 credit point compulsory unit

Course structure

Semester 1 Entry

Semester 1

HAI010Academic Integrity (0 credit points)

HNN751Advanced Physiology and Patient Assessment

HNN752Core Principles of Care for the Critically Ill Patient

Semester 2

HNN795Cardiac Nursing (2 credit points)

Semester 2 Entry

Semester 2

HAI010Academic Integrity (0 credit points)

HNN791Core Principles of Critical Care Nursing (2 credit points)

Semester 1

HNN795Cardiac Nursing (2 credit points)


Other course information

Course duration - additional information

Course duration may be affected by delays in accessing or undertaking clinical requirements.

Further information

Student Central can help you with course planning, choosing the right units and explaining course rules and requirements.