Starting with a video song in honoring all Nurseshttps://youtu.be/29fdVOqraQs -"These Hands" A song in honour of all nurses
International Nurses Day (12th May, 2016)
International Nurses Day (IND) is celebrated every year all around the world on 12th
of May to commemorate the birth anniversary of the Florence Nightingale
and to mark the nurses contributions towards people’s health.
International Nurses Day History
Nurses Day was first proposed by the Dorothy Sutherland (an officer
from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare) in the year
1953 and first proclaimed by the President Dwight D. Eisenhower. And it
was first celebrated by the International Council of Nurses (ICN) in the
year 1965.
In the month of January in 1974, the 12th of May was
declared to be celebrated as the birthday anniversary of the founder of
modern nursing, the Florence Nightingale. International Nurses Day Kit
(having educational and public information materials to be used by the
nurses among public) is prepared and distributed every year by the
International Council of Nurses while celebrating the nurses day.
UNISON (the British public sector union) had asked the ICN in 1999 to
celebrate this day on another date as Florence Nightingale is not
symbolizing the modern nursing. Then, National Student Nurses’ Day was
started celebrating annually on 8th of May since 1998 and National Nurses Week was started celebrating every year from 6th of May to 12th of May since 2003.
International Council of Nurses commemorates the International Nurses Day annually all around the world on 12th
of May as the birth anniversary of the Florence Nightingale.
International Council of Nurses would distribute an IND Kit in 2014
having educational and public information materials with the theme
“Nurses: A Force for Change – A vital resource for health”. Nurses are
encouraged at this day to comprehensively use this kit throughout the
year through their individual and group activities.
Florence Nightingale (the foundational philosopher of the modern nursing) was born on 12th
of May in 1820. International Council of Nurses established the day in
1974 to be celebrated every year to highlight the importance of nurses
role in providing the best health care services. She became an important
figure of the nursing since Crimean War during 1850s. She, stationed at
the Barrack Hospital, Scutari, reformed the health care services and
nursing and opened “the Nightingale School of Nursing” at the St. Thomas
Hospital, London in 1860.
Promotional and educational activities are organized while
celebrating the International Nurses Day annually to address lots of
nursing issues. The theme of celebration is selected based on nurses and
environment, handling poor, poverty issues and many more. It is
celebrated as a week long event, referred as National Nurses Week, in
many countries like Australia, United States, Canada and etc.
International Nurses Day Celebration
International Nurses Day is celebrated every year by organizing a
candle lamp service in the Westminster Abbey, London. A candle lamp is
handed over from one nurse to another (symbolizing to pass the knowledge
from one nurse to another) to place it on the High Altar. A big
ceremony is also held at the St. Margaret’s Church, the Florence
Nightingale burial place, a day after her birthday.
It is celebrated for week long in the US and Canada as a National Nursing Week from 6th of May to 12th
of May. Varieties of nursing ceremonies are conducted during the whole
week celebration in the Australia. National Nurses Week is the whole
week celebration targeting the health care services on international
level. It is celebrated to recognize the contributions and commitments
of the nurses among common public. American Nurses Association supports
and encourages the celebration of National Nurses Week all through
states and districts nurses associations including other health care
companies and institutions.
Whole week celebration is planned to commemorate the nurses
significant role in caring patients. Activities are held such as
educational seminars, variety of community events, debates,
competitions, discussions and etc. Nurses are appreciated and honored at
this day by distributing gifts, flowers, organizing dinners and etc by
the friends, family members, coworkers (doctors, administrators, and
patients).
Significance of International Nurses Day
It is celebrated annually on 12th of May to celebrate the
birth anniversary of the modern nursing founder, the Florence
Nightingale. Nursing is the largest health care profession in the world
and nurses are the key of achieving the Millennium Development Goals
(MDG). Nurses are well trained and educated for maintaining the health
and wellness of the patients through all the aspects like
psychosocially, socially and etc.
Nurses have deep practical knowledge of delivering best health care
services. National nurses associations (NNAs) play an important role in
making nurses well informed, advised, encouraged and supported to
deliver better work. NNAs works with the governments and non-government
organizations to strengthen the health care systems as well as create
conditions maximizing the nurses contribution.
International Council of Nurses celebrates this event aiming to
increase the public awareness about the nursing and nurses contribution
towards the health care innovation. Nurses are the fast and first point
of contacting for health services. Nurses are innovatively practiced to
provide free health checkup to the industries indicating their
willingness of improving the health of staffs, to meet all the local
needs, to improve the physical, mental and well-being of the patients
and etc.
International Nurses Day Theme
Every year theme of the International Nurses Day celebration from 1988 to 2014 is mentioned below:
- The theme of 1988 was “Safe Motherhood”.
- The theme of 1989 was “School Health”.
- The theme of 1990 was “Nurses and Environment”.
- The theme of 1991 was “Mental Health – Nurses in Action”.
- The theme of 1992 was “Healthy Aging”.
- The theme of 1993 was “Quality, costs and Nursing”.
- The theme of 1994 was “Healthy Families for Healthy Nation”.
- The theme of 1995 was “Women’s Health: Nurses Pave the Way”.
- The theme of 1996 was “Better Health through Nursing Research”.
- The theme of 1997 was “Healthy Young People = A Brighter Future”.
- The theme of 1998 was “Partnership for Community Health”.
- The theme of 1999 was “Celebrating Nursing’s past, claiming the future”.
- The theme of 2000 was “Nurses – Always there for you”.
- The theme of 2001 was “Nurses, Always There for You: United against Violence”.
- The theme of 2002 was “Nurses Always There for You: Caring for Families”.
- The theme of 2003 was “Nurses: Fighting AIDS stigma, working for all”.
- The theme of 2004 was “Nurses: Working with the Poor; Against Poverty”.
- The theme of 2005 was “Nurses for Patients’ Safety: Targeting counterfeit medicines and substandard medication”.
- The theme of 2006 was “Safe staffing saves lives”.
- The theme of 2007 was “Positive practice environments: Quality workplaces = quality patient care”.
- The theme of 2008 was “Delivering Quality, Serving Communities: Nurses Leading Primary Health Care”.
- The theme of 2009 was “Delivering Quality, Serving Communities: Nurses Leading Care Innovations”.
- The theme of 2010 was “Delivering Quality, Serving Communities: Nurses Leading Chronic Care”.
- The theme of 2011 was “Closing the Gap: Increasing Access and Equity”.
- The theme of 2012 was “Closing the Gap: From Evidence to Action”.
- The theme of 2013 was “Closing the Gap: Millennium Development Goals”.
- The theme of 2014 was: “Nurses: A Force for Change – A Vital Resource for Health”.
- The theme of 2015 was “Nurses: A Force for Change: Care Effective, Cost Effective”.
- The theme of 2016 would be “Nurses: A Force for Change: Improving health systems’ resilience”.
International Nurses Day Quotes
Some of the quotes on international nurses day are mentioned below:
- “If love can’t cure it, nurses can”.
- “Nurses dispense comfort, compassion, and caring with or without even a prescription”. – Val Saintsbury
- “Nurses are the hospitality of the hospital”. – Carrie Lafet
- “A thousand words will not leave so deep an impression as one deed”. – Henrik Ibsca
- “Nurses are the heartbeat of Healthcare”.
- “Women have no sympathy and my experience of women is almost as large as Europe”. – Florence Nightingale
- “Apprehension, uncertainty, waiting, expectation, fear of surprise,
do a patient more harm than any exertion”. – Florence Nightingale
- “Panic plays no part in the training of a nurse”. – Elizabeth Kenny
- “I have lived and slept in the same bed with English countesses and
Prussian farm women… no woman has excited passions among women more than
I have”. – Florence Nightingale
- “Hospitals are only an intermediate stage of civilization”. – Florence Nightingale
- “Some minds remain open long enough for the truth not only to enter
but to pass on through by way of a ready exit without pausing anywhere
along the route”. Elizabeth Kenny
- “She said the object and color in the materials around us actually
have a physical effect on us, on how we feel”. – Florence Nightingale
6 Days Of National Nurses Week (6th to 12th May) : Facts You Probably Didn’t Know
Intriguing and interesting!
Each year we celebrate a day where we recognize the work and
dedication of nurses all around the world. The International Council of
Nursing (ICN) celebrates the International Nurses Day on the anniversary
of Florence Nightingale’s birth on May 12. In the United States, the National Nurses Week is celebrated from May 6 to 12 in honor of nurses nationwide and is lead by the American Nurses Association (ANA).
Just how much do we know about Nurses Week? We dug down our history
books and found these six intriguing and interesting facts about nurses
week you probably didn’t know.
1. It took 40 years to recognize the National Nurses Week we’ve come to know today

Image via:
rmcrealtors.com
It wasn’t easy for nurses to receive the recognition they deserve. It
took several presidents, congressional sponsorships, proclamations,
proposal and about 40 years to celebrate the week we’ve come to know
today as National Nurses Week.
It all started in 1953 when Dorothy Sutherland from the US Department
of Health, Education and Welfare made a proposal to President
Eisenhower to proclaim a Nurse Day for the following year.
Unfortunately, the proclamation was not made. The following year, in
1954, a National Nurses Week did took place in observance of the 100th
anniversary of Nightingale’s Crimean mission. In 1955, a bill was
introduced to continue National Nurses Week observances, but it was
never acted upon and by the Congress and stopped making any resolutions
for national weeks of various kind.
Fast-forward 17 years after, in 1972, a resolution was presented by
the House to President Nixon for a National Registered Nurses Day, still
nothing happened. In 1974, after the International Council of Nurses
(ICN) proclaimed May 12th as International Nurse Day since they’d been
celebrating that day for almost a decade, and President Nixon issued a
White House proclamation that designated a National Nurse Week, after
which New Jersey worked to make the celebration annual, with Governor
Brendon Byrne declaring May 6th Nurses Day, and a private citizen named
Edward Scanlon worked to promote the celebration on his own listing
Nurses Day in Chase’s Calendar of Annual Events.
In 1981, the ANA and other nursing organizations rallied to support
another resolution from nurses in New Mexico through their Congressman,
Manuel Lujan to have May 6, 1982 established as National Recognition Day
for Nurses. In February of the following year, the ANA Board of
Directors formally acknowledged May 6, 1982 as National Nurses Day,
affirming a joint resolution of Congress that had designated May 6th as
National Recognition Day for Nurses.
On March 25th that same year President Reagan signed a proclamation
proclaiming May 6, 1982 National Recognition Day for Nurses. In one
final step in 1990, ANA’s Board of Directors expanded nurse recognition
to a week-long celebration, declaring May 6 to 12, 1991 as National
Nurses Week. In 1993 they designated May 6 to 12 as permanent dates for the annual National Nurses Week.
2. Different days of celebration for different nurses (even one for student nurses!)
Just as there are many specialized fields in nursing, there are also
days in the nurses week that target these unique nursing fields. School
nurses are honored on the Wednesday of the official May 6 to 12 National
Nurses Week. Additionally, student nurses are recognized on May 8 as
requested by the National Student Nurses Association way back in 1998.
These dates were designated in 1993 by the ANA to enhance planning and
help establish recognition of the annual event. It is also to encourage
young people to consider nursing as a career.
The National Nurses Week culminates on May 12 in honor of the birth of Florence Nightingale. International Nurses Day is also celebrated on May 12.
3. Largest human nurse formation in the Philippines
Image via: Philippine Nurses Association
In celebration of the International Nurses Day, Filipino nurses form
the largest human nurse formation that symbolizes unity of the country’s
nurses. For the last two years, the Philippine Nurses Association (PNA) has
hosted the event where nurses from the country wear their white
uniforms during the formation to show their support. This 2015 is no
different as the PNA is inviting nurses to to join their the third annual human nurse formation.
4. The Procession of the Lamp in United Kingdom
Image via: Florence Nightingale Foundation
In the United Kingdom, Nurses Day is celebrated on May 12th in honor
of Nightingale’s birth. And each year, there is a unique observance
called the “Procession of the Lamp” at Westminster Abbey in London.
During the ceremony, a lamp is taken from the Nurses’ Chapel at the
Abbey and is passed along a line of nurses from another. The lamp is a
representation of the one used by Nightingale at Scutari (thus the name
‘Lady with the Lamp’). The last person in line places the lamp on the
High Altar in the Abbey. The passing of lamp symbolizes the passing of
information and knowledge from one nurse to another. The nurses involved
are usually scholars of The Florence Nightingale Foundation.
The ceremony also includes announcement of the Nurses’ Roll of Honor –
a record of names of British nurses who have died in conflict since the
start of World War II.
5. Remembrance service for Nightingale
Image via: geograph.org.uk
On May 12 each year, there is a service of remembrance at St.
Margaret’s Church in East Wellow, Hampshire where the Nightingale family
burial site is located. The church was founded in 1215, the year of the
signing of the Magna Carta. Resting in one of the windows was the
Scutari Cross, made of bullets from the Crimean War, beside it is a
framed text which was hanging in Florence Nightingale’s bedroom when she
died. In 1991, the cross was stolen and was replaced with a fiberglass replica.
There is also a four-sided monument in the churchyard with
inscriptions on each side for the four family members: Frances
Nightingale (mother), William Edward Nightingale (father), Parthenope
Frances Nightingale (sister), and Florence Nightingale where her name
grave is simply inscribed with letters “F.N.” and the words “Born 1820.
Died 1910.”
6. Removing Florence Nightingale from the celebrations
Throughout the recent years, there are several groups in the United Kingdom trying to remove the historical importance of Florence Nightingale
in Nurses Day and Nurses Week celebrations. In 1999, delegates at the
annual conference of Unison, Britain’s largest trade union representing
nurses and other public service workers, unanimously declared that
nursing was long overdue for a more contemporary role model.
This sparked when there is an acute shortage of nurses in the UK.
While there are many multiple reasons for the shortage, the Unison
believe that the legacy of Nightingale is one of them. They feel that
she “has held the nursing profession back to long,” and represents
“negative and the backward elements of nursing.” Unison nurses even
requested that the International Nurses Day celebrated on May 12th, be
moved to a different date.
Fortunately, those nursing groups made no success as we are still
celebrating Nurses Day and Nurses Week in honor of Florence Nightingale
and the nurses of today.