The convening of the Summit of the National Nursing and Midwifery and the Presidential High-Level Advisory Council on the Support of Women and Girls in Nigeria today in Abuja underscores a coherent national purpose under the Renewed Hope Agenda of His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR
@officialABAT, to secure lives, strengthen our health workforce, and advance the dignity and opportunity of women and girls as a foundation of Nigeria’s human capital.
The launch of the Nigeria Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery (2025–2030) at the Nursing and Midwifery Summit seeks to expand training, elevate leadership, and embed evidence-based professional standards, including our adoption of the Best Practice Spotlight Organization (
#BPSO) model, to improve quality of care nationwide. This is a practical step that consolidates service excellence where Nigerians meet their health system: the frontline. In parallel, the Presidential High-Level Advisory Council (P-HLAC) advances an integrated, life-course approach that centres women and girls and recognises that maternal health, adolescent wellbeing, protection from gender-based violence, and equitable access to education and economic opportunity are not peripheral to development; they are the architecture of it.
These engagements are mutually reinforcing. The Nursing and Midwifery framework strengthens who delivers health while the High-Level Council ensures for whom and how health is delivered and that women and girls can access and benefit from those services safely, equitably, and with dignity. Through the
#NHSRII and its Sector-Wide Approach
@SWApGov, we are translating collaboration into results: coordinated investments, clear accountability, reliable data, and frontline capacity that reaches every community.
In tandem, we are advancing the continental mandate entrusted to Mr President as the
@_AfricanUnion Champion for Human Resources for Health & Community Health Delivery Partnerships by demonstrating, in practice, how policy coherence, institutional investment, and gender-responsive governance can transform the health workforce and unlock Africa’s demographic dividend. Nigeria will continue to lead by example, scaling training and jobs for nurses and midwives, entrenching evidence-based care, protecting women and girls, and revitalising primary health care as the engine of resilience.
We deeply appreciate the leadership and partnership across government and society that continue to define our work. We particularly acknowledge the unwavering advocacy and inspiration of Her Excellency, Madam First Lady,
@SenRemiTinubu CON, whose commitment to adolescent health, maternal wellbeing, and women’s empowerment continues to elevate these priorities to national and global attention. Her leadership embodies the human face of the Renewed Hope Agenda.
We also recognise Her Excellency Senator
@HarryBanigo, Chair, Senate Committee on Health
@NGRSenate; the Hon Minister Women Affairs
@FMWA_ng, Hajiya Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim
@ImmaculateIman; and the Hon Minister of Education,
@DrTunjiAlausa @NigEducation, whose collaboration with
@Fmohnigeria has expanded national training quotas for nurses and midwives from 28,000 to 115,000 and strengthened alignment between health and education in workforce development. The support of the SGF, Senator George Akume
@SGFAkume @OfficialOSGF; Hajiya Hadiza Bala Usman
@hadizabalausman, SA to the President, Policy & Coordination and Head, CDCU
@NGRPresident; among other colleagues are vital to our mission.
We appreciate our development partners including the
@WHO,
@UNFPA, and the
@FCDOGovUK, whose consistent technical and programmatic collaboration continues to strengthen the system we are building together under the
#NHSRII and the
#SWAp framework.
Under the Renewed Hope Agenda, our direction is clear and our commitment firm, to a health system that protects life, honours those who deliver care, and ensures that no Nigerian is left behind.