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Holyrood event celebrates the vital role of community nurses and midwives in Scotland

There was a celebratory atmosphere at the Scottish Parliament last night (10 September), as MSPs, health professionals, policymakers, nurses and midwives from across the country gathered to mark 135 years of the Queen’s Nursing Institute Scotland, and the awarding of the Queen’s Nurse title to more than 170 contemporary Queen’s Nurses.

Founded by Royal Charter in 1889 to provide nursing care for the ‘sick poor’ of Scotland’s communities, QNIS organised the training of District Nurses in Scotland until 1969. Nurses who qualified from the Institute were known as Queen’s Nurses.

The title was re-introduced in 2017, and since then 170 community nurses and midwives from all over Scotland have undertaken a flagship nine-month programme to earn the title of Queen’s Nurse. As part of the programme, participants are expected to work on an issue for development which makes a difference to their community, based on a need which they have identified alongside their employer, and there is an expectation that this work will have a focus on promoting equity and inclusion.

Three people are engaged in a lively conversation at an indoor event. One person in the centre is smiling and wearing a blue tartan sash and a badge on a lanyard, holding a drink. The other two individuals are facing them, one in a suit and the other in a light-coloured jacket. The background features a warmly lit interior space.

Along with over 70 Queen’s Nurses, attendees at the event at Holyrood included Minister for Public Health and Women’s Health, Jenni Minto, who welcomed attendees and expressed gratitude for the work of community nurses , and Interim Chief Nursing Officer, Anne Armstrong, who spoke passionately about the vital role of QNIS and its work to support and develop nurses.

The event gave contemporary Queen’s Nurses a chance to display posters illustrating project work that they completed during the programme, to talk to their local MSPs about issues affecting the profession and their work in communities, and to network with cohorts from different years of the development programme.

Three people are standing and laughing together in front of informational posters at what appears to be a conference or academic event. All three are wearing tartan sashes or ties. One person holds a drink, and another holds a bag. They appear to be engaged in a friendly, animated conversation.

Today QNIS is a charity that supports and encourages community nurses and midwives to become confident, resilient, and inspiring leaders. It also provides friendship, connection, and support for retired Queen’s Nurses who trained prior to 1969.

Alongside the Development Programme, QNIS also runs other programmes and projects that aim to help promote health equity.

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