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Nursing Now Challenge Fellowships Zambia

Blog Article

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The Nursing Now Challenge Fellowship (NNCF) programme was funded by the Burdett Trust for Nursing through the Tropical Health & Education Trust (THET). The programme specifically aimed to build the leadership of early-career nurses and midwives in Africa and Asia, in alignment with the Nursing Now Challenge. 

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  • Increase leadership (confidence, competence, and capability) of participating nurses and midwives, enabling them to be more effective and increase their leadership, influencing and decision-making abilities.
  • Raise the status of nursing and midwifery within Health Partnerships and within their multi-disciplinary teams.
  • Raise the status of women, who comprise the majority of the nursing and midwifery cadres, within the health workforce.
  • Improve quality of global health projects undertaken by health partnerships, and thus partnerships’ outcomes and impact.

Fellows were supported by both Zambian and UK nurses and AHP mentors.

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To support six Fellows in five hospitals to complete a leadership training and quality improvement project (QIP)

Country and Company involved

  • Zambia
  • Ministry of Health
  • Lusaka College of Nursing
  • University Teaching Hospital (Adult Hospital)
  • Cancer Diseases Hospital
  • Maina Soko Military Hospital
  • St Francis Mission Hospital
  • Chipata Central Hospital 

Final outcome

Key outputs include:

  • Completion of quality improvement projects in Emergency Nursing, Critical Care Nursing and Operating Theatre Nursing
  • 5 virtual Community of Practices created, supporting Fellows working in Emergency & Trauma, Critical Care and Operating Theatre Nursing.
  • Local mentors supported Fellows with their clinical projects and reflections from practice.
  • Delivery of the BCU / Lusaka College of Nursing Mentorship train the trainer’s programme for local mentors.
  • Writing for publication train the trainer’s programme for Fellows.
  • International NHS / academic mentors provided professional and technical support quality improvement projects.
  • Delivery of leadership journal clubs
  • Publication in an international nursing journal which coincided with International Nurses Day.
  • Blog raising the profile and importance of investing in specialist nurses for the Tropical Health & Education Trust.
  • Presentations at two international conferences.

Further information

Fellows presented at the pre-World Health Assembly

  • Notter J. Carter C. Mukonka-Sakala P. et al. (2022). Handing on the batten: developing early career nurse leaders. British Journal of Nursing. 31. 9. 504-505

Blog published by Fellows