Nurses in New Zealand set to celebrate 2020 International Year of the Nurse
4 December 2019
Nurses globally and in New Zealand will join together next year to celebrate the International Year of the Nurse and the
global Nursing Now campaign.
2020 has been chosen by the World Health Organization as the International Year of the Nurse, coinciding with the 200th
anniversary of the birth of Florence Nightingale, one of the founders of modern nursing.
The Nursing Now movement, which coincides with the 2020 celebrations, is organised by the International Council of
Nurses and is a worldwide campaign to raise the status and profile of nursing, through a growing social network of
groups aiming to influence global and national policy.
Another part of the celebrations is the Nightingale Challenge, named after Florence Nightingale. The challenge is asking
every health employer around the world to provide leadership and development training for a group of their young nurses
next year.
The Ministry of Health's Chief Nursing Officer Margareth Broodkoorn says it’s important to use the celebrations as a
chance to profile the value of nurses, and promote the profession as a great career opportunity. Global indications are
showing a decline in the health workforce of 18 million by 2030, which means over the next 12 years we will need 2,000
more nurses everyday across the world.
“It’s been a huge couple of years for nursing in New Zealand, with the signing of the Nursing Accord, immediate relief
funding for nursing FTE, more resources in this year’s budget for new graduate nurses, rolling out Registered Nurse
prescribing to more areas and amending legislation enabling Nurse Practitioners to perform certain functions previously
only doctors could.”
“It’s only natural that 2020 is shaping up to be another big year,” says Margareth Broodkoorn.
“By the end of next year, the aim of the International Year of the Nurse and Nursing Now celebrations is to see more
nurses in leadership and a greater understanding of the integral part nurses play in New Zealanders’ health care.
“For people who need health care, nurses often play a crucial role in their wellbeing and recovery. We need to continue
to support our nurses to deliver the best care they can. We can do this by boosting workforce numbers, promoting
leadership development and continuing to promote nursing as the thoroughly fulfilling profession it is.”
The National Nurses Organisation, which represents nursing leaders from the major nursing entities in New Zealand, is
coordinating the International Year of the Nurse and Nursing Now campaigns and there will be celebrations throughout the
year.
"I am proud to be a nurse in New Zealand and to be part of this global movement to celebrate and promote nursing as a
wonderful and rewarding career. I hope our health leaders, clinical colleagues, employers, and the community will want
to celebrate with us too," says Margareth Broodkoorn.
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