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Celebrating our first National Children’s Nurses Day

Barts Heart centre nurse with headscarf

We’re celebrating our amazing nurses who work together for babies, children and young patients across northeast London.

The Association of British Paediatric Nurses has launched the first ever National Children’s Nurses Day on Monday 29 June 2026 to recognise the extraordinary dedication and compassion the children’s nursing workforce brings to families.

As one of the largest providers of children’s services in the country, from neonatal and intensive care to children’s emergency departments, community nursing, specialist services, researching, safeguarding, mental health, health visiting and school nursing and many more, our children’s nurses support those who face significant health inequalities and complex needs and their families during some of the most challenging moments of their lives.

Kath Evans, director of children’s nursing at Barts Health shares: “We’re proud to champion our workforce of children’s nurses who work tirelessly for our youngest patients, placing them at the centre of their decision making throughout innovation, leadership and partnership work.

“National Children’s Nurses Day is a chance for us to celebrate their achievements that may inspire future children’s nurses. Most importantly, the day offers a chance to thank colleagues whose dedication and compassion make a world of difference every single day.”

Shining a light on some of our nursing heroes:

Tricia May‑Parrott has transformed children’s care by creating the family liaison nurse role at Whipps Cross Hospital, ensuring families receive holistic support beyond the immediate emergency presentation.

She has personally reviewed over 428 frequent attenders, identified critical safeguarding gaps, and facilitated more than 242 referrals to essential services. Her award‑winning pilot achieved an 83% reduction in repeat Paeds ED visits, improving safety, stability, and the quality of care for vulnerable children.

Tricia May-Parrott

Ivone Lancoma‑Malcolm has driven a major shift in paediatric research by embedding research into everyday maternity and neonatal care across Newham, The Royal London, and Whipps Cross. She and her team were central to recruiting 8,970 babies, 24% of the UK total, into a crucial study investigating if new technology like the Neocam can detect congenital cataracts accurately for all babies.

As Newham serves one of the most ethnically diverse populations in the UK, their participation was scientifically crucial for ensuring the technology works for everyone, making them an essential part of delivering more equitable and representative research and a major contributor to the fight against avoidable childhood blindness.

Ivone Lancoma‑Malcolm

Neil Fletcher and Jessica Semedo are transforming how young people move from children’s to adult services, ensuring transition is treated as a planned, supportive process rather than a single moment.

Neil has led Trust‑wide improvements for eight years, from developing staff communication workshops to shaping policy and digital systems that make transition safer and more developmentally appropriate.

Jessica, a Roald Dahl clinical nurse specialist, is a powerful advocate for young people’s voices, strengthening youth engagement and championing care that reflects their needs, goals and lived experiences.

Neil Fletcher and Jessica Semedo

As we highlight the remarkable contribution of individual nurses and teams, this day is a chance to highlight the partnerships between acute providers, community services, mental health teams, primary care, local authorities, education, social care and the voluntary, community and faith sectors.

All these powerful collaborations ensure local families receive person-centred care that recognises the wider factors shaping the health and wellbeing or our children.

If you’re interested in children’s nursing, begin you career with us or check out our current vacancies. 

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