Abstract

In November 2013, the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International (STTI), announced the creation of the Global Advisory Panel on the Future of Nursing (GAPFON) to establish a voice and vision for the future of nursing and midwifery that will advance global health. The composition of the panel, first convened in March 2014, was purposeful in nature to ensure that the voices at the table represented individual expertise and experience from diverse backgrounds. Key issues identified at this inaugural meeting included the need for reform, advocacy, and innovations in leadership, policy, practice, education, and work environments. While the specific context through which these efforts will be addressed is nursing and midwifery, recognition of the interprofessional and collaborative nature of the world's healthcare needs and systems was kept at the forefront of all discussions. GAPFON intends to demonstrate how nursing and midwifery can contribute to strengthening health systems and attaining global health goals through the exchange of ideas and experiences across the different regions of the world. GAPFON is designed to be a catalyst to stimulate partnerships and collaborations to advance global health outcomes, and is a vehicle for thought leaders to share information, develop and influence policy, and advance interprofessional efforts toward those goals.Health professions from across disciplines have helped direct, define, and advance public health-and the role of health practitioners within public health-around the world for decades, establishing the current model for global health. As a result, health promotion policies and processes have been established, diseases have been mitigated, access to care has been facilitated, and a notion of "shared responsibility" for the world's health has been realized. Nursing and midwifery have played a key role in the innovation and cohesion required to establish, sustain, and implement this model of global health.As healthcare demands predicate the need for enhanced and/or new models of global health, nurses, midwives, and our healthcare colleagues from all professions need to bring a clear voice and vision for the future of global health. This is especially important as we address the United Nation's Millennial Development Goals (MDGs; United Nations, 2014), and also support the emerging Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs; United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Division for Sustainable Development, 2014) as part of the post-2015 agenda.As with other healthcare professionals, nurses believe in and support the idea that an investment in health results in an enormous payoff, and that in our collective lifetimes, a grand convergence in health is within reach (Jamison et al., 2013). Additionally, globalization, in all its facets-economic, technological, and cultural- has created a world market for the nursing workforce (Shaffer, 2014). Opportunities continue to grow for nurses and midwives to have a strong role in shaping health at the policy and practice levels, even as challenges present themselves: demand for nurses exceeds supply; nursing and midwifery education and regulation differs across borders; and task shifting and sharing are increasing as some traditional nursing work is being undertaken by healthcare generalists that are less costly to employ. GAPFON recognizes all the possibilities for nursing to have an inclusive voice worldwide, to overcome barriers, and to help create a new narrative for nursing and a model for global health.With the support of Pfizer, Inc., our Founding Sponsor, and Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, in 2015 and 2016, GAPFON will address its core mission by convening a series of meetings in seven global regions:* Middle East (April 2015)* Asia/Oceania (June 2015)* The Caribbean (July 2015)* Central-Latin America (July 2015)* Africa (July 2016)* Europe (2016)* North America (2016)Each meeting will convene thought and action leaders from a variety of disciplines, including ministers of health, representatives from key nursing and midwifery associations, educational institutions, economists, regulatory bodies, other health professionals or health industries, pharmaceutical companies, and governmental leaders that are influential in global health. …

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