This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

Sir Simon Stevens has praised the so-called ‘Nightingale effect’ which has seen thousands of new NHS recruits mark their first International Nurses Day.
The chief executive of NHS England hailed the tireless work of nurses, healthcare support workers and assistants in caring for around 400,000 seriously ill coronavirus patients and millions more besides and delivering the NHS vaccination programme.
Volunteers who have supported NHS staff during the coronavirus pandemic are among those who have decided to sign up, as the skills, dedication and professionalism of nurses and other NHS staff were put in the spotlight.
NHS England says that there were over 11,000 more nurses, midwives and health visitors working in the NHS in England in January than 12 months earlier, bringing the total to a record 330,000 as well as an additional 5,195 healthcare support workers and assistants. There are also record numbers of student nurses entering the profession.
New NHS data shows that 330,631 nurses were employed across NHS hospitals and organisations as of January 2021, an increase of 3.5 per cent on a year earlier, while there were also 151,123 healthcare support workers, up 3.6 per cent over the same period. Meanwhile, applications to studying nursing at university were up 34 per cent across England this year to an all-time high of 48,830.
Stevens said: “Nurses, healthcare support workers and assistants have been at the forefront of the NHS’s extraordinary response to the coronavirus pandemic. Their skill, professionalism and tireless work has made sure that the NHS treated all those Covid patients who could benefit and millions with other conditions.
“Nurses’ dedication has also played a vital part in the hugely successful rollout of the NHS vaccination progamme that has combined speed and precision in a way unrivalled around the world. Of course, nursing is not always easy but it is one of the most rewarding careers you can have so it is no surprise that given the profession’s high profile over the last year many more people have been inspired to join the NHS’s ranks by the so-called Nightingale effect.
“On International Nurses Day I want to say thank you on behalf of the whole country, to them and to and all their colleagues who have played a part in the remarkable NHS response to Covid.”
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
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