
Hu Jintao (3rd L), Chinese president and honorary president of the
Red Cross Society of China, poses with Chinese laureates of the 41st Florence
Nightingale Award during an awarding ceremony held at the Great Hall of the
People in Beijing, capital of China, July 17, 2007.
BEIJING, July 17 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao on Tuesday
conferred the Florence Nightingale medal on five Chinese nurses for their
outstanding contributions to healthcare.
The nurses included Cering Namo, a Tibetan caring of lepers at a hospital
in southwest China's Qinghai Province, Chen Haihua, who works at a Beijing
hospital and was once awarded the UN peace medal, Ding Shuzhen, who kept working
after being diagnosed with cancer, Nie Shujuan, who has been fighting hepatitis
in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, and Luo Shaoxia from a
Macao hospital.
Vice Premier Wu Yi expressed the hope that nurses around the country would
learn from the five recipients and carry forward the Florence Ningtingale
spirit.
She also encouraged the Red Cross Society of China (RCSC) to play a bigger
role in assisting the government and raising public awareness of the work of
nurses.
RCSC president Peng Peiyun hoped all Chinese nurses and Red Cross workers
would improve their professional standards and service.
Florence Nightingale, a British nurse during the Crimean War from 1854 to
1856, was regarded as the pioneer of the modern nursing.
The Nightingale Award was established by the International Committee of the
Red Cross in 1912 and is presented every two years. The Chinese Red Cross
Society began to recommend candidates for the award in 1983.
Hu Jintao is the Honorary President of the RCSC.