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Christabel Chinonso U. worked as a social care nurse when she came to the UK from Nigeria in 2022. She participated in FNF leadership programme for social care nurses from ethnic minority backgrounds in 2022-23. In this blog she talks about her experience to date.

three people standing together, one in a red dress, the middle person is wearing a red jacket and black trousers and the person on the right is wearing a black dress.

“I used to think I was confident and had communication skills, but coming to the UK all that changed. I wasn鈥檛 getting the job satisfaction and I was entirely going downhill 鈥 so I started searching for trainings to boost myself, to help me be effective at my work and get back my job satisfaction. I stumbled across FNF and did the co-consulting training 鈥 but I wanted more.

I screamed when I heard I was accepted on the social care leadership programme, I was anticipating so much 鈥 and I wasn鈥檛 wrong, the whole thing was mind-blowing.

As part of the programme we did the RADA sessions and the 鈥榖uilding your authority鈥 course, I didn鈥檛 want the sessions to end. Then every day at work I would see myself trying to stand the way we had practiced at RADA, I was seeing myself living it out every day.

It has improved my confidence, it has improved my communication. I have much better skills when it comes to collaboration and team work. I have seen career progression. The list is endless.

My quality improvement project within the leadership programme focused on improving care for people living with diabetes in care homes. This is my passion. My parents both died from complications with diabetes, it made me want to do something. I didn鈥檛 want this to happen again, I didn鈥檛 want the people I cared for to get this bad. I know the things that diabetes can cause if it鈥檚 not managed.

鈥淒iabetes alone is responsible for 43 %of hospitalisations, 52 % of Nursing Home admissions and 47% of deaths in elderly adults 65 鈥 74years.鈥(ADA).

I鈥檓 now working as a specialist diabetes nurse but I am longing to go back to social care. I want to combine the specialist diabetes work with the broader support I can provide people with within social care. Some people think nurses enter social care because it鈥檚 easy but there鈥檚 so much more to it.

When I first came into social care I didn鈥檛 understand the role very well and so I felt stampeded, I wasn鈥檛 able to be effective. I was in a hurry to run away but going through this course I had a big change of mind. I wish I鈥檇 done it earlier in my work in social care. It changed me. Hearing Deborah Sturdy talk to us about her dreams and her passions for social care was amazing, she is literally living this out, wow! Why didn鈥檛 anybody bring this up with me before! It gave me a huge shift. I realised that career progression in social care really does exist.

Christabel has also recently written a blog for Skills for Care, The future of social care nursing and its endless possibilities. Read an extract below and the full blog here.

鈥淭he role of nurses in health and social care remains crucial, as they bring so much energy, empathy and compassion in providing care, support, and guidance to individuals鈥. One of the most exciting things about the future of social care nursing professionals is the potential for innovation and growth, with new technologies and the evolution of healthcare systems, nurses will have access to a wealth of tools and resources that can help them provide even better care.鈥

If you would like to apply for one of our Leadership Programmes, find out more here.