The President of India, Smt. Droupadi Murmu conferred the National Florence Nightingale Awards for the year 2026 to nursing professionals at a ceremony held at Rashtrapati Bhavan today. A total of 15 nurses from diverse regions and healthcare settings were honoured in recognition of their exemplary service, unwavering dedication to strengthening public health delivery, and outstanding commitment to the welfare of the community.
Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Shri Jagat Prakash Nadda and Union Minister of State for Health & Family Welfare, Shri Prataprao Jadhav also graced the occasion.
In her message on the occasion, the President remarked that “nursing personnel exemplify the highest standards of service and play a crucial role in delivering quality healthcare, often in the most challenging circumstances.”


The nurses who were awarded today are as under:
| S.No. | Category | Name | State / Union Territory |
| 1 | ANM | Ms Kulwinder Parhi | Ladakh (Union Territory) |
| 2 | ANM | Ms Ujwala Mahadev Soyam | Maharashtra |
| 3 | ANM | Ms Lalenthangi Hnamte | Mizoram |
| 4 | ANM | Ms Madhu Mala Gurung | Sikkim |
| 5 | ANM | Ms Pooja Parmar Rana | Uttarakhand |
| 6 | ANM | Ms Gita Karmakar | West Bengal |
| 7 | Nurse | Ms Poonam Verma | Chandigarh (Union Territory) |
| 8 | Nurse | Ms Deepa Biju | Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu (UTs) |
| 9 | Nurse | Dr Sharwan Kumar Dhaka | Delhi |
| 10 | Nurse | Ms Raksha Rupo Parvatkar | Goa |
| 11 | Nurse | Ms Kavitha Jagannath | Karnataka |
| 12 | Nurse | Ms Manju Mol V S | Keralam |
| 13 | Nurse | Ms Aysha Beebi K | Lakshadweep (Union Territory) |
| 14 | Nurse | Prof (Dr) R Shankar Shanmugam | Tamil Nadu |
| 15 | Nurse | Major Gen Lissamma P V | IHQ of MoD (Army), Delhi |

Nursing has a pivotal role to address the multiple health challenges and respond to the health needs of individuals, communities and the world. According to the scope of practice, nurses provide appropriate, accessible and evidence-based care. With a core role as patient advocate, their scientific reasoning skills, numbers and spectrum of care across the continuum, nurses are ideally placed to lead and inform health services decision making policy development. Being closest to patients, nurses can bring their voice to the policy table.

Recognising the vital role of nurses and midwives in strengthening healthcare delivery, the Government of India, under the leadership of the Hon’ble Prime Minister, has undertaken transformative initiatives to expand training capacity, modernise nursing education and regulatory frameworks through the National Nursing and Midwifery Commission Act, and establishment of 157 nursing colleges co-located with medical colleges to build a skilled, competent and empowered nursing workforce for improved health outcomes and a stronger healthcare system.