The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Prestigiou­s Queen’s Nurse title returns to Fife as health visitor in line for accolade

Dunfermlin­e woman selected totakepart­in new programme to resurrect coveted label

- craig smiTh csmith@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife health visitor has been selected to participat­e in a new programme which will earn her the right to use the prestigiou­s Queen’s Nurse title.

The coveted label was establishe­d in the days of Queen Victoria to honour her golden jubilee in 1889, with the title awarded to nurses who completed training equipping them for community work.

Dunfermlin­e woman Gemma Macdonald is one of 20 communityb­ased nurses chosen by the Queen’s Nursing Institute Scotland (QNIS) to join the first cohort of 21st Century Queen’s Nurses.

The modern Queen’s Nurses, who will be drawn from health boards and other independen­t organisati­ons across Scotland, will enable teams to promote health improvemen­t and deliver quality care.

On completion of the programme, Gemma, who is based at the Rosewell Clinic in Lochore, will be one of the first nurses to receive the Queen’s Nurse title in Scotland for almost 50 years.

Nicky Connor, associate director of nursing for Fife’s health and social care partnershi­p, said she was delighted to see health visiting included in the QNIS Queen’s Nurses developmen­t programme and wished Gemma well.

“The early years have a profound impact on an individual’s future experience of health and wellbeing,” Nicky added.

“Health visitors have a vital role to play in supporting children and families in the first several years of a child’s life.”

Once they have completed the QNIS developmen­t programme, the modern Queen’s Nurses will support new models of care to promote health improvemen­t and local delivery of services.

“With health policy rapidly shifting the balance of care towards care at home, it is an opportune time to highlight the important contributi­on of community nurses,” said Scotland’s Chief Nursing Officer Fiona McQueen.

“The return of the Queen’s Nurse title is a very welcome mark of profession­al excellence.”

QNIS originally trained nurses for community district work, with the last award made in January 1969.

They provided healthcare and health promotion to people in their own homes and were well respected in the communitie­s in which they practised.

Since then, QNIS has become a charity, promoting excellence in community nursing to improve the health and wellbeing of the people of Scotland.

The new Queen’s Nurses will take part in a nine-month programme, developing and honing their existing skills and capabiliti­es, culminatin­g in an awards ceremony in December.

 ?? Pictures: Steven Brown/ Getty Images. ?? Gemma Macdonald, top, is one of 20 community-based nurses chosen by the Queen’s Nursing Institute Scotland to undergo training.
Pictures: Steven Brown/ Getty Images. Gemma Macdonald, top, is one of 20 community-based nurses chosen by the Queen’s Nursing Institute Scotland to undergo training.
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