A man living with cancer died after being given multiple overdoses of morphine
Editorial
Revalidation has arrived.
Politicians, professionals and the public woul
It is hard to believe that the global financia
A £600 million initiative has been launched to
The results of two major surveys were released
Primary care in the UK has long been dominated
Good news about nurse staffing levels can be h
‘In many parts of the NHS, managers are experi
Fans of the BBC drama series Call the Midwife
Time is running out to enter this year’s Nurse
A pay rise of no more than 1% is what nurses i
Read the national press and you could be forgi
The name Sarah Swift may mean little to you, but she played a pivotal role in the development of modern nursing.
Reflections and resolutions always accompany the turn of a year, as we inevitably take stock of the previous 12 months and look forward to the new year ahead.
They came in their hundreds, from all over the UK. Nursing students and their supporters converged on Whitehall to stand outside the Department of Health and voice their protests at plans to scrap bursaries and end free tuition for nursing students.
Most chancellors of the exchequer give with one hand and take with the other, but George Osborne hit nursing with a double whammy last week.
Nurses have a lot on their plate just now so tackling climate change might feel like someone else’s problem.
Nurses know all about resilience, and most possess it in abundance.
