On 12 May 2026, the world marked International Nurses Day. It was a time to pause, recognize nurses, and honor the essential role they play in patient care.
But for the World Patients Alliance (WPA), this recognition must extend beyond a single day.
Patients experience healthcare not only through appointments, treatment plans, or medical services. They experience it through the healthcare professionals who stand beside them in moments of vulnerability and uncertainty.
Often, it is nurses who bring calm, comfort, and reassurance to those moments. Their presence helps patients feel supported, heard, and less alone.
That is what makes nurses the true heart of healthcare.
Through the Patients’ Hats Off to Nurses Initiative, under the broader Heart of Healthcare: Celebrating Our Nurses campaign, WPA continues to recognize nurses beyond International Nurses Day. This global initiative encourages patient organizations, healthcare partners, and supporters to publicly celebrate nurses. It also reinforces the direct link between nurse wellbeing, patient safety, and the quality of care.
In this blog, WPA reflects on the vital contribution of nurses and why supporting, protecting, and empowering them must remain a priority throughout the year.
Why Nurses Matter to Patients
For patients, the value of nursing is often felt in small but important moments.
It is in a clear explanation before a procedure.
It is in the reassurance given to a worried family member.
It is in the careful observation when something changes.
It is in the calm voice that helps a patient understand what comes next.
These moments may seem simple, but they shape how patients experience care.
Nurses help turn care into something patients can understand and trust. They support communication between patients, families, and healthcare teams. They help reduce confusion. They make sure concerns are heard. They bring attention to changes that may otherwise be missed.
Their role is both professional and deeply human.
For patients, nursing is not only about clinical support. It is also about dignity, comfort, trust, and continuity. These are the parts of care that people remember long after a hospital visit, treatment, or difficult health moment has passed.
The Message of International Nurses Day 2026
The theme for International Nurses Day 2026 was:
“Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives.”
This message is direct and timely.
It reminds the world that nurses are not only essential to today’s care. They are also central to the future of healthcare.
Safe and patient-centered care depends on nurses who are supported, protected, empowered, and included in decisions that affect healthcare delivery.
This same message guides WPA’s continued work to recognize nurses from the patient perspective. Nurse wellbeing is closely connected to patient safety, care quality, communication, and trust.
When nurses are supported, patients are better supported.
Appreciation Is Important, But Not Enough
Saying thank you matters.
Nurses deserve recognition from patients, families, healthcare leaders, policymakers, and communities. Their contribution should be seen, respected, and valued.
But appreciation alone cannot address the pressures nurses face.
Across health systems, many nurses continue to work under heavy workloads, staff shortages, long hours, emotional stress, and difficult working conditions. These pressures affect nurses directly. They can also affect the safety, quality, and continuity of patient care.
When nurses are stretched under heavy workloads, patients may have less time to ask questions. Families may receive less support. Care teams may face greater pressure. Communication may become harder.
This is why supporting nurses is also supporting patients.
Through its advocacy campaign, WPA has highlighted the projected global shortage of 4.5 million nurses by 2030 and called for sustained financial investment in the nursing workforce. This investment is essential to help address the shortage and support safer, more patient-centred care.
This call reflects a clear patient-centered concern. Nursing shortages are not only a workforce issue. They also affect patient safety, communication, continuity of care, and the ability of health systems to respond to growing patient needs.
What Stronger Support Should Look Like
Support for nurses must be practical.
It should not remain limited to annual messages or public appreciation. It should be reflected in how health systems plan, resource, protect, and listen to the nursing workforce.
That means recognising nurses in national health planning and universal health coverage strategies.
It means investing in workforce sustainability, including retention, professional development, and fair workforce planning.
It means creating safe and respectful working environments, with attention to staffing, burnout prevention, and mental health support.
It also means including nursing leadership in health policy, crisis planning, and decisions that shape care delivery.
Nurses understand the realities of patient care because they live those realities every day. They see where patients face delays, confusion, fear, or gaps in support. They also see what helps care work better.
Their voices should be part of healthcare planning.
What You Can Do Now
You do not need to wait for the next International Nurses Day to support nurses.
There are simple ways to keep the message going.
Thank nurses for the care, skill, and compassion they provide.
Share messages that recognise the role of nurses in patient safety and patient-centred care.
Support calls for safer, more respectful, and better-resourced working environments.
Encourage patient organisations, healthcare stakeholders, and policymakers to include nursing voices in discussions about care quality and health system improvement.
Use your platform to remind others that nurses are not only caregivers. They are essential partners in safer healthcare.
These actions may feel small, but they help keep public attention on a profession that patients depend on every day.
Recognition Must Continue Beyond One Day
International Nurses Day 2026 gave the world an important moment to recognize and honor nurses.
But as we move beyond International Nurses Day, its message must continue.
Nurses remain beside patients in hospitals, homes, communities, and crisis settings. They carry the responsibility of care, the trust of millions, and the pressure of growing health system demands.
WPA reaffirms its support for a future where nurses are recognized, protected, empowered, and included in the decisions that shape healthcare.
This year, let us do more than thank nurses.
Let us stand with them.
Together, we take our hats off to nurses.

