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Nightingale effect sees surge in nurses joining NHS during pandemic | The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald

To mark International Nurses Day, health leaders have praised nurses’ “remarkable response” to the crisis. The NHS in England said that due to the “Nightingale effect” there are now thousands more nurses working in the health service after being inspired by the work of nurses during the pandemic. Meanwhile nursing leaders said that the spotlight on nurses during the crisis has “shattered stereotypes”. The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said that the pandemic has helped to dispel old-fashioned views such as that nursing is a predominately female or a “vocational” role. Media reports have shown nurses on the frontlines of the crisis, battling to save the lives of patients.

International Nurses Day: Leave a message for our tireless nurses

Boris Johnson joins Helena Bonham Carter at service to pay tribute to nurses

The Prime Minister was among a reduced congregation of 60 people at Westminster Abbey in London. The service, which takes place annually to mark Florence Nightingale’s birthday on May 12 – now known as International Nurses’ Day – is this year recognising the contribution and sacrifice of nurses and midwives since the outbreak of Covid-19 in the UK. Actress Helena Bonham Carter, a descendant of Florence Nightingale, reads from Isaiah 61: ‘The spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me; he has sent me to bring good news to the oppressed…to comfort all who mourn’ pic.twitter.com/xEI7PspymP

University leads training to help NHS respond to stress and burnout

Date Time University leads training to help NHS respond to stress and burnout With the additional pressures of COVID-19, it has been a year like no other for the NHS. Now the University of Plymouth has been working with and training nurse professionals to help colleagues in need of support. The Professional Nurse Advocates (PNA) programme was launched this year by Chief Nursing Officer for England, Ruth May and funded by NHS England. With 400 teaching places in the first wave, funded nationwide, the University was allocated 120 – and has just completed training its first cohort. PNA training provides those on the programme with skills to improve the quality of patient care, and to facilitate restorative supervision to their colleagues and teams in nursing and beyond.

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