Coroner criticises failures to check patient record before tragedy, the latest at the trust
My job
Discover how Louise Hughes benefited from spending three weeks in the United States and learn how you might follow in her footsteps.
In February, I spent three weeks studying nursing leadership on a Florence Nightingale Foundation travel scholarship to New Zealand.
The RCNi Nurse Awards give nurses a platform to change practice - and patients' lives - for the better, as a former winner explains
When Eleanor Smith’s daughter Abigail said she wanted to follow in her mother’s footsteps and become a nurse, the seasoned public sec
Dorcas Gwata: ‘There is no such thing as “hard to reach” groups, just lack of innovation’.
District nurses want to spend less time on paperwork
Around half of diabetes specialist nurses are expected to retire in the next decade, and one third of hospitals now have no specific
Joan Pons Laplana’s nursing career has not been linear, which perhaps befits a man who believes in ‘horizontal power’ and challenges
As a ship’s nurse, Leo Hamburger deals with everything from minor injuries to life-threatening conditions.
Queen’s Nurse Shorai Dzirambe on how her role has evolved.
In the fifth year of the civil war in Syria, nurses working for more than 200 agencies and aid groups in the region are providing pai
New technology is changing nurses’ daily work, with many welcome devices freeing up time for patient care.
I joined NHS Blood and Transplant as a specialist nurse in organ donation in 2012.
Many nurses working in UK prisons are being offered help to mentor offenders thanks to a new course called Navigating Health in Justice.
When Esther Poveda saw an advert for band 5 nurses at Yeovil District Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, she was keen to apply. But she had worked in a care home since coming to the UK from her native Spain 12 months earlier, so she was nervous.
During the Queen’s Nursing Institute awards ceremony in 2014, England’s chief nursing officer (CNO) Jane Cummings asked to shadow Queen’s Nurses while they worked.
Brenda Cheer believes early support is key.
In the dozen or so days after the devastating April 25 earthquake in Nepal, in which more than 8,000 people died, many international search and rescue teams arrived and left.
