International Home Care Nurses Organization 5th Global Conference Highlights the Growing Impact of Home & Community Nursing

More than 200 nursing leaders, researchers, educators, policymakers, and clinicians from 33 countries gathered in London from 17–19 June 2026 for the International Home Care Nurses Organization (IHCNO) 5th Global Conference, Caring Beyond Walls: The Power of Nursing in Homes, Communities and Primary Care Settings. Hosted jointly by the International Home Care Nurses Organization (IHCNO), the Association of District Nurse and Community Nurse Educators (ADNE), and City St George's, University of London, the conference showcased the growing importance of home and community nursing in addressing some of the world's most pressing healthcare challenges.
As healthcare systems around the world confront aging populations, rising rates of chronic disease, workforce shortages, and increasing demand for care delivered closer to home, delegates explored how nurses are leading innovative care models that improve health, strengthen communities, and build more sustainable healthcare systems.
The conference featured more than 100 oral presentations and posters presented alongside an internationally recognised keynote programme. Across 19 concurrent scientific sessions, researchers from North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Oceania showcased innovations in digital health, artificial intelligence, Hospital at Home, integrated care, workforce development, advanced nursing practice, infection prevention, chronic disease management, child and family health, mental health, rehabilitation, family caregiving, palliative care, and culturally responsive nursing. Together, the keynote programme and scientific sessions demonstrated the growing maturity of home and community nursing as a global specialty and reinforced its essential role in strengthening healthcare systems and improving population health.
A recurring message emerged throughout the conference: the future sustainability of healthcare systems depends on strengthening home and community nursing through investment in research, education, leadership, workforce development, and evidence-informed policy.
Global Leadership and Policy
Delegates were welcomed by Professor Natalie Armstrong, Executive Dean of the School of Health and Medical Sciences at City St George's, University of London, together with conference co-chairs Dr Susan Hinck, President of IHCNO; Dr Dame Crystal Oldman, DBE, CBE, Vice President of IHCNO; and Mark Millar, Chair of ADNE.
Opening keynote presentations by Dr Karen Bonner, MBE, Regional Chief Nurse for NHS England (London), and Professor Dame Elizabeth Anionwu, OM, DBE, CBE, FRCN, FQICN, celebrated nursing leadership while challenging delegates to continue advancing health equity, culturally responsive care, and compassionate leadership. Dr Bonner highlighted the vital contribution of internationally educated nurses, who now comprise nearly half of London's registered nursing workforce, while Dame Elizabeth reflected on her pioneering career improving care for people living with sickle cell disease and her lifelong commitment to addressing health inequities.
Additional keynote speakers, including Dr Barbara Stilwell, Professor Renata Barros, Duncan Burton, Paul Labourne, Professor Nicola Ranger, Professor Alison Machin, Professor Michelle Bateman, Professor Alison Leary, and Paul Trevatt, explored nursing leadership, workforce development, professional advocacy, and policy innovation across diverse healthcare systems.
A keynote by Dr Howard Catton, Chief Executive Officer of the International Council of Nurses, placed home and community nursing within the broader global agenda for health systems strengthening. Drawing on the findings of the State of the World's Nursing Report 2025, Dr Catton emphasized that 90% of essential interventions needed to achieve Universal Health Coverage can be delivered through a primary health care approach, while 75% of the projected health gains associated with the Sustainable Development Goals can be achieved through primary health care. He underscored that nurses are "essential to the reorientation of health systems toward a primary health care approach," particularly in reaching disadvantaged communities, migrants, displaced populations, and people with disabilities. Through community engagement, he noted, nurses bridge gaps among healthcare providers, social workers, patients, caregivers, and communities, building trust and amplifying community voices in health planning and service delivery. He concluded by challenging delegates to "Own and Embrace Your Power—and Change the World."
Taken together, the keynote programme demonstrated that leadership, policy, workforce development, and professional advocacy are fundamental to strengthening home and community nursing and achieving Universal Health Coverage, advancing the Sustainable Development Goals, and building more equitable, resilient health systems.
Science, Innovation, and International Collaboration
The scientific programme also highlighted advances in child and family health, mental health, learning disability nursing, and culturally responsive care, demonstrating nursing's contribution across the life course and across diverse healthcare settings. The conference’s scientific contributions will reach an even wider audience through publication of the conference proceedings in an upcoming issue of the British Journal of Community Nursing. Beyond the lecture halls, delegates established new international collaborations, exchanged educational resources, explored multicountry research initiatives, and strengthened professional networks that will continue long after the conference concluded.
Capacity-building opportunities included a pre-conference policy masterclass led by Professor Gemma Stacey and a writing-for-publication workshop led by Rida Fazal, Editor of the British Journal of Community Nursing, equipping participants with practical strategies to strengthen both their policy influence and scholarly impact.
Advancing the Global Home Care Nursing Profession
One of the conference's defining achievements was the launch of the IHCNO Scope and Standards of Home Care Nursing, providing the first internationally developed framework to support excellence, consistency, professional development, and recognition of home care nursing as a specialty across diverse healthcare systems. The conference also highlighted international efforts to strengthen home care nursing education and certification, reinforcing IHCNO's commitment to advancing home care nursing as a recognised specialty.
The conference also celebrated leadership by presenting the 2026 IHCNO DAISY Nurse Leader Award to Mark Millar, recognising his outstanding contributions to community nursing education, professional leadership, and the successful planning of the global conference.
One of the conference’s most memorable events was an evening at the Florence Nightingale Museum, which provided delegates with an opportunity to reflect on nursing's rich history through presentations by Professor Baroness Anne Marie Rafferty, performances portraying Florence Nightingale and Mary Seacole, and a moving wreath-laying ceremony at the Mary Seacole Memorial, where Felicia Kwaku, OBE, Chair of the Mary Seacole Trust, reflected on Seacole’s enduring legacy. Together, these events highlighted the enduring values of compassion, courage, leadership, and service that continue to define nursing today.
The final scientific session focused on nurses working in conflict zones. Presenters from Myanmar and Ukraine described how they continue delivering education, rehabilitation, and essential community-based healthcare despite armed conflict, political instability, and humanitarian crises, reminding delegates of the resilience, courage, and global solidarity of the nursing profession.
Looking Ahead
As populations age, chronic illness increases, and healthcare systems face growing workforce pressures, home and community nursing will play an increasingly central role in delivering accessible, person-centred, and sustainable care.
The conference concluded with IHCNO's traditional Closing Light Ceremony, symbolizing delegates carrying new knowledge, stronger international partnerships, and renewed inspiration back to their own countries and communities.
As populations age, chronic illness increases, and healthcare systems face growing workforce pressures, home and community nursing will play an increasingly central role in delivering accessible, person-centred, and sustainable care. The IHCNO 5th Global Conference reaffirmed that the future of healthcare will increasingly be shaped beyond hospital walls through nursing leadership, scientific discovery, international collaboration, and person-centred care.
Conference Sponsors
IHCNO gratefully acknowledges the support of Bayada Home Health Care (Platinum Sponsor), EBSCO Dynamic Health (Gold Sponsor), and Always Best Care Senior Services (Silver Sponsor).
IHCNO also extends its appreciation to City St George's, University of London, and the Association of District Nurse and Community Nurse Educators for their partnership in hosting the conference.
About IHCNO
The International Home Care Nurses Organization (IHCNO) is the leading global professional organization dedicated to advancing home-based nursing care. Since its founding in 2009, IHCNO has united nurses, educators, researchers, administrators, and health leaders from across the world to strengthen nursing practice in homes and communities. Through international collaboration, education, research, leadership development, and advocacy, IHCNO works to improve the quality, visibility, and impact of professional home care nursing and to support nurses in delivering person-centred care where people live.
About ADNE
The Association of District Nurse and Community Nurse Educators (ADNE) is the UK’s national charity for educators involved in district and community nursing education. The association champions high-quality education, supports the development of advanced district and community nursing roles, and fosters collaboration between universities, practice partners, students, practice assessors, and practice supervisors. ADNE works to ensure that district and community nursing education remains responsive, evidence-informed, and aligned with the evolving needs of people, families, and communities. More information is available at https://adne.org.uk
About the DAISY Foundation
The DAISY Foundation is a not-for-profit organization, established in memory of J. Patrick Barnes, by members of his family. Patrick died at the age of 33 in late 1999 from complications of Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), a little-known but not uncommon autoimmune disease. (DAISY is an acronym for Diseases Attacking the Immune System.) The care Patrick and his family received from Nurses while he was ill inspired the creation of The DAISY Award® for Extraordinary Nurses, an evidenced-based means of providing Nurse recognition and thanking Nurses for making a profound difference in the lives of their patients and patient families. In addition to the DAISY Award® for Extraordinary Nurses, the Foundation expresses gratitude to the nursing profession internationally in over 7,000 healthcare facilities and schools of nursing with recognition programs for nurses wherever they practice, in whatever role they serve, and throughout their careers – from nursing student through lifetime achievement, and through several lines of research grant and evidence-based practice projects funding. More information is available at https://DAISYfoundation.org
About City St George's, University of London
City St George’s, University of London is the University of business, practice and the professions. City St George’s attracts around 27,000 students from more than 170 countries. Our academic range is broadly-based with world-leading strengths in business; law; health and medical sciences; mathematics; computer science; engineering; social sciences including international politics, economics and sociology; and the arts including journalism, dance and music. In August 2024, City, University of London merged with St George’s, University of London creating a powerful multi-faculty institution. The combined university is now one of the largest suppliers of the health workforce in the capital, as well as one of the largest higher education destinations for London students. City St George’s campuses are spread across London in Clerkenwell, Moorgate and Tooting, where we share a clinical environment with a major London teaching hospital. City St George’s is led by Professor Sir Anthony Finkelstein.
More information is available at https://www.citystgeorges.ac.uk/


