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King hosts celebration of international nurses and midwives

Hundreds of overseas nurses and midwives attended a reception at Buckingham Palace on the King’s birthday as part of celebrations for 75 years of the NHS
King Charles meets nurses

Hundreds of overseas nurses and midwives attended a reception at Buckingham Palace on the King’s birthday as part of celebrations for 75 years of the NHS

King Charles welcomed NHS nurses and midwives to Buckingham Palace on his birthday Picture: Alamy

Hundreds of nurses and midwives attended a reception at Buckingham Palace last night hosted by the King on his 75th birthday.

Royal reception celebrates international NHS nurses and midwives on King’s birthday

The event, which is part of the NHS 75 celebrations, highlighted the contribution of the international nursing and midwifery workforce over the decades.

Chief nursing officer for England Ruth May and deputy chief nursing officer for Northern Ireland Mary Frances McManus were among those to greet the King, alongside 400 nurses and midwives from all backgrounds, including some of the 150,000 international nurses currently working in the UK.

The King met nurses who have come to work in the NHS from countries such as India, the Philippines, Poland and Kenya.

Nurses said they were honoured and proud to receive the invitation to the palace. Moorfields Eye Hospital senior theatre nurse practitioner Cecelia Tribunal, originally from the Philippines, said she was ‘profoundly grateful’.

Nurses ‘delighted, privileged and honoured’ to be invited to the palace

Somerset NHS Foundation Trust nurse and inclusion lead Sun Sander-Jackson was also among those at Buckingham Palace. She was recently appointed regional lead for the south west for the chief nursing officer and chief midwifery officer’s black minority ethnic strategy advisory group.

She tweeted that she was ‘privileged and honoured’ to represent nurses at the event.

Others on the guest list included deputy ward sister Bincy Jose and nurse Annabelle Dalangin who work for Southern Health and Social Care Trust in Northern Ireland.

Clinical educator Matt Achurra and matron André Santos, both from Royal Papworth Hospital, also attended the reception. Mr Achurra is from the Philippines and arrived in the UK in 1999, while Mr Santos is from Portugal and moved to the UK in 2011.

Senior nurses praise contributions of overseas staff

Royal Papworth chief nurse Maura Screaton said: ‘We are incredibly proud of them both – as we are all our overseas nurses – for their commitment to our patients and the NHS.

‘Overseas nurses bring excellence, a diversity of skills, and a cultural vibrancy to our hospital, helping us to provide inclusive care to our patients of all backgrounds. It’s why we go above and beyond to provide outstanding pastoral support to nurses who arrive from outside the UK, at every stage of their journey.’

The King also met with refugee nurses and representatives from international nursing and midwifery associations. The reception concluded with a birthday song performed by the NHS choir.


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