Regional nurses hailed as pillars of healthcare system

Regional nurses have been told that they are “the pillars of the regional healthcare system and an integral part of the promotion and maintenance of wellness across the region”.

CEO of CIBC FirstCaribbean, Colette Delaney paid tribute to the regional nurses recently and indicated that nowhere was this more evident in recent times than in their heroic efforts on the frontlines of the Covid 19 pandemic, which sadly, according to the bank manager, also claimed the lives of nurses around the world and in the region.

“We cherish and honour our nurses who despite great personal risk turned up for duty to do what they do best – offer care comfort and healing. We also remember with love and deep gratitude those who were lost to the pandemic,” Ms. Delaney said.

She noted that CIBC FirstCaribbean had a deep commitment to the development of nursing in the region and was the nurse training partner with the SickKids Foundation’s SickKids-Caribbean Initiative (SCI), a partnership with the University of the West Indies (UWI), Ministries of Health, hospitals, and institutions in six Caribbean countries.  This partnership focuses on building sustainable local capacity to diagnose, treat and manage paediatric cancers and blood disorders.

As nurse training partner, the bank supported the training of 41 nurses in Haematology/Oncology through the SCI-UWISON Paediatric Haematology/Oncology Nursing Education Program (PHONEP) at the University of the West Indies School of Nursing (UWISON) in Trinidad and Tobago.

Fourteen nurses from Jamaica, 13 from Trinidad and Tobago, 5 from the Bahamas, 4 from Barbados, 3 from St. Vincent and the Grenadines and 2 from St. Lucia graduated from the one-year training programme.

“The SickKids-Caribbean Initiative continues to improve health outcomes for children in the Caribbean with cancer and blood disorders, thanks to the generous support of partners like CIBC FirstCaribbean,” said Ted Garrard, CEO, SickKids Foundation. “Since 2013, the program has seen transformational progress towards education, advocacy and specialty nurse training to ensure the delivery of quality care.

Ms. Delaney is also the Chair of the bank’s charitable arm, The FirstCaribbean ComTrust Foundation, which signed an initial MOU with SickKids in 2013 offering USD$1 million support over seven years, and later renewed that support for a similar amount in 2020 over a five-year period.

The SickKids-Caribbean Initiative (SCI) has been helping health care professionals improve health outcomes for children with cancer and blood disorders, by among other things training specialized professionals including doctors and nurses.

The initiative is helping nurses in across the region become change agents for their communities. The skills they have obtained from this program help them ensure all patients receive high-quality care at what is the most vulnerable time of their lives.

The CIBC FirstCaribbean CEO paid tribute to the Caribbean nurses on International Nurses Day which was observed on May 12, 2022.

 

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3 Comments

  1. Gerard Benjamin
    May 17, 2022

    I find it rather strange if not paradoxical,🤔🤔 that given our often celebrated distinction of having the best and an enviable primary health system in the region ,not one trainee or participant is noted from Dominica.

  2. Dr Clayton Shillingford
    May 17, 2022

    Excellent article Quoting from above..I do not see any mention of nurses from Dominica Did any participate???

    “Fourteen nurses from Jamaica, 13 from Trinidad and Tobago, 5 from the Bahamas, 4 from Barbados, 3 from St. Vincent and the Grenadines and 2 from St. Lucia graduated from the one-year training programme.”

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