Nurses Day
Today is Nurses Day. It is celebrated around the world on the anniversary of Florence Nightingale's birth.
Staff at NNUH will be celebrating with an exhibition on research, education, health and well being as well as talks from nurses on their careers and experiences.
There will also be a display of nurses uniforms through the ages.
Here are three stories about nurses working at NNUH who will be joining in the celebrations.
Ruth Sanders
Ruth Sanders had every intention of training to be a primary school teacher, then she fell pregnant and was inspired by her midwife to change her plans.
I had never thought of it before. She was just amazing and I had this feeling if I could do for somebody what she enabled me to feel like in quite a challenging situation then I would have done a good thing, she explained.
Following Arthurs birth she joined the Maternity Services Liaison team as a representative to get an insight into the way the NNUH Trust works and what is important to mums and families.
Ruth said she was really excited to get a place on the course and started her training when Arthur was nearly two, putting him into nursery full time.
She already had two art related degrees but she says her training was the most challenging degree I had done.
Ruth qualified in August last year after three years of training and in a very competitive world she was offered a job to start with working 15 hours a week. But her hours were not enough for a single parent to live on and she faced getting a job in a café near her Norwich home.
In desperation she started ringing round to see if any organisation could help her. She found a helpful welcome when she spoke to the Cavell Nurses Trust charity which supports nurses, midwives, healthcare assistants and students who are in financial or personal hardship during their training, career or retirement.
I sent in an application and they gave me a small amount of money which made a difference and I could meet the rent plus Christmas was a lot less stressful for my five year old. It was a little help that made a lot of difference and I didnt need a second job.”
Her hours then went up and she was soon working full time in the job she loves.
Its an amazing job, you feel privileged and honoured to facilitate families at such a crucial time in their lives. Its all about them and you want to make it a real positive experience, she said.
On my first day on the community team I saw a baby being born. It was a home birth and it was my first and the midwifes 100. It was a moment when you well up yourself but remind yourself its their moment not yours.
The first baby made me cry, but then lots do – I go when the Dads cry.
Its magic every time, its a miracle.
After that first birth she completed 39 more deliveries as part of her training and since qualifying has been able to deliver alone.
The Trust has been fantastic, said Ruth, incredibly supportive and enabling of me Im just feeling nurtured as a junior member of staff and theres a great pool of expertise around me.”
Danny Edmonds
Danny Edmonds says he is lucky because he always knew he wanted to be a nurse, his dream was to join A & E , and in 2002 he began his training at the University of East Anglia.
Now he says, although it is hard work, he would recommend the career he has become passionate about because You make a difference. You change people's lives on a daily basis.
Nursing although at times is incredibly pressured it is a career like no other. You'll see and do things others don't even think of. It opens millions of different career pathways and experiences, but I think mainly it offers you the chance to make a difference in someone's life and that's a very special gift.
At the age of 20 his first post after qualifying was in A&E. The first 6 to 12 months of being a nurse were scary, the responsibility, the pressure, the hours and the demands on you were initially very daunting. But the team was amazing and the support incredible. Ive made some lifelong friends from that department and its left a long lasting impression on me.”
He says the best part of being an A & E nurse was the buzz of never knowing what was coming in the door next, from a minor wound to a serious road accident. He loved the fast pace flow but he didnt like seeing patients being rude, disrespectful and aggressive towards staff trying to care for them.
Danny later became a staff nurse on A& E then moved up to become a charge nurse on the Acute Medical Unit. After that he started working as a site nurse practitioner and for the past year he has been a site manager.
His current role is very different to previous jobs he has had within the NNUH. It involves maintaining safety and high standards of care delivery as well as supporting nursing staff.
The team of site managers work 24/7 to facilitate flow through the hospital from when a patient walks into A&E to being discharged from a ward. They work very closely with the matrons to ensure the smooth running of the hospital and act as a link between the nursing staff and senior levels of management.
Out of hours they are the most senior members of the nursing team responsible for what happens on the site and for the staff working on it.
Danny says he wants to continue developing his career and loves what he is currently doing. I like change and development, challenges and taking things forward.
He warns anyone thinking about a career in nursing Don't come into nursing for the glamour, you'll be very disappointed.
But you make a difference. You change people's lives on a daily basis. You inspire people to carry on fighting, you support patients and families at their lowest points in their lives, you give life and offer dignity in death. You train the nurses of the future, you offer hope and solutions. You comfort and you care.
Sue Flynn
Sue Flynn loves coming into work, she has spent the past 30 years caring for old people.
The elderly are very interesting people, said Sue who is a health care assistant at NNUH They come in when they are really ill then a few days or weeks later you seem them walking out all well again.
Her mum was a staff nurse at the former West Norwich Hospital and Sue joined the NHS in 1981 in catering. Once she had her four children she decided to step into nursing.
Sue joined the nurses bank and worked on several wards but preferred working with older peoples medicine. They are wonderful people, she enthuses and remembers back when she first began at the old hospital that there was a large dayroom with a piano where nurses played cards and games with patients and they would sing war time songs with them once a month.
I have always felt comfortable with the elderly because I could help them more, she explained. And when people suggested she could rise up the ranks she said she didnt want to as it would take her away from the patients.
Although nursing has changed a lot Sue says she looks forward to coming to work and finds time to chat with elderly patients as she helps them to wash.
Im 64 and I dont know what I would do if I had to retire.”
As well as her mum having been a nurse Sue seems to have had some influence on her family as two of her daughters are also HCAs at the hospital. She now has 12 grandchildren and one great granddaughter and is wondering if any of them will join the NHS.
Last year Sue was a winner of an Unsung Hero Award at the annual staff awards for her work on Kimberley ward where she has been for 19 years. She was nominated by many of her colleagues and some patients with one saying she was treated like a Queen when Sue looked after her.
Sue says she couldnt believe it when she won I was pleased and proud.”