Wales Health Visiting Celebration Week 3–7 March 2025

Wales is celebrating health visiting with a national week of events and activities planned between 3-7 March 2025. The aim is to raise awareness of health visiting services and recognise the fantastic contribution that all staff make to the delivery of high-quality care to support families and improve outcomes for babies and children across Wales.

Established by the All-Wales Heads of Health Visiting Advisory Forum, it is the first event of its kind, with plans in place to make this an annual national event.

Ceri Hughes, All-Wales Heads of Health Visiting Advisory Forum Chair and Service Manager Health Vsiting, School Nursing, Children Looked After and Paediatric Continence (WestIHC), Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, said:

“Health Visiting is a service that often goes unnoticed, but plays a crucial role in the early years. The health visitor’s role is extensive in promoting health and resilience in the lives of children and their families. I am so proud to launch this first event in Wales, to celebrate and raise awareness of this dedicated and highly skilled workforce.

“The All-Wales Heads of Health Visiting Advisory Forum felt it was important to recognise and celebrate the work of health visiting teams across Wales, and while this celebration week makes its debut, with annual events to follow, it is important to recognise that we value the hard work and commitment teams make every day.

“Thanks to the working group, chaired by Rachel Raymond, and all those involved in the planning and delivery.”


Monday 3 March 2025 sees the launch of the event with an online webinar from 10am to midday. Speakers include Wales’ Chief Nursing Officer Sue Tranka, Alison Morton – iHV’s CEO, Amanda Holland – iHV Education, Learning and Development Lead, Wendy Fowler – NMC, and Public Health Wales. Followed by an action-packed week of activities and events across the 7 local health boards in Wales which include staff and parents.

Sue Tranka, Chief Nursing Officer, Wales, added:

“This week we celebrate the dedication, compassion and expertise of health visitors in Wales, who are the backbone of the early years system. We are deeply grateful for their commitment to improving the lives of children and their families across Wales and for the positive difference they make every day.”

Alison Morton, CEO, Institute of Health Visiting, said:

“The All-Wales Health Visiting Week provides a fantastic opportunity to celebrate the very best of health visiting across Wales. Since the beginning of our wonderful profession, more than 160 years ago, health visiting has responded to the most pressing public health priorities of the time. And 2025 is no different! Health visitors across Wales deserve to feel very proud of their achievements, with so many examples of excellence in practice which are making a real difference to the babies, children and families that they serve. Congratulations and enjoy your celebrations.”

See below for the agenda of the launch event of the Wales Health Visiting Celebration week, and the activities throughout the week.

A short new film is launched today: ‘Health visiting in your community’. This inspiring film showcases the breadth of health visitors’ work and their critical role in supporting the health and wellbeing of thousands and thousands of families every week.

View iHV short film: Health visiting in your community

As health visitors often work alone, or in small teams in families’ homes, their work is often hidden and it’s easy to overlook how important it is. The film captures the voices and stories of parents with a wide variety of different needs – they speak powerfully about the difference that the health visitor’s care and support made to their family when they needed it most.

In the UK, health inequalities are widening, and the cost-of-living crisis is pushing more families into poverty; health visitors are needed now, more than ever, to meet the scale of rising need.

The iHV’s film has taken many months to plan and develop – it was created in partnership with parents and frontline health visitors to appeal to parents, health and social care practitioners, government policy makers and commissioners, and to strengthen the case for health visiting by making the work of health visitors more visible.

The film was shot on location in multiple sites across the UK and captures just a small fraction of ‘real life’ for families. It follows health visitors in their working day, visiting babies, young children and families in their own homes and community settings to deliver a diverse range of care and support.

Alison Morton, iHV Executive Director, commented:
“So often we hear that the work of health visitors is not widely understood. Whilst it is impossible to capture the full breadth of the health visitor’s role in just a few minutes, I am delighted that we have been able to shine a light on some of this incredible work in our film today. There are some powerful scenes in the film which captures glimpses of ‘real life’ and parents tell their own stories of the unforgettable difference that their health visitor made – health visitors were there when they needed them most. I am very grateful to the parents who shared their experiences so generously and the health visitors who are all a credit to our wonderful profession.”

Dame Ruth May, Chief Nursing Officer England, said:
“This film highlights the important and unique role of health visitors. As specialist community public health nurses, they use their expertise to provide invaluable support to families, babies and children at such a significant time in their lives, while also carrying out crucial work in health promotion and reducing inequalities.”

Professor Mark Radford CBE, Chief Nurse for NHS Health Education England, said:
“This video is a wonderful collection of stories from our fantastic health visitors and the people they are supporting – every day in every community across the country.

“It is heart-warming to hear from the nurses playing such an important role in the health and development of babies and children. The smiles on the faces of the families they help says it all – being a health visitor can be the most rewarding job in the world!”

Alex McMahon, Chief Nursing Officer for Scotland, said:
“Health visiting in Scotland has rightly had significant investment in the number of health visitors. This was increased by 500 health visitors by the end of 2018. We have had a universal health visiting pathway in place for every family since January 2020. The Health Visitors Universal pathway follows the Getting it Right for Every Child principles, providing child and family-centred care in each unique circumstance.

“Health visitors are uniquely placed to support children and families, improving children’s long term emotional, social and physical development within their family unit which affects their future health, parenting and attainment into adult years. The trusting relationships that health visitors form with families start pre-birth and last until school. Health visitors offer that vital health and social wellbeing support for all families from early pregnancy and through early childhood. Their service improves the health, safety and wellbeing of families every day.”

Sue Tranka, Chief Nursing Officer for Wales, said:
“I am delighted to support the launch of this inspirational new film which describes the important work of health visitors and their teams. Health visiting provides an expert professional to support every parent and child, providing expert advice, health assessments and information to all new families. The service is key to the delivery of the Healthy Child Wales programme, a universal offer of health contacts for all children in the early years to ultimately ensure they have the best start in life.”

Wendy Nicholson, Deputy Chief Nurse & Head of WHO Collaborating Centre for Public health nursing, Office for Health Improvements and Disparities (OHID), said:
“I am delighted so see this film launched, it shows the breadth and dynamic nature of health visitors. This film highlights the vital role health visitors play in supporting and helping parents to give their child the best start in life. The skill, expertise, compassion and commitment shines through – and the difference for children and parents is a testament to public health nurses.”

David Fothergill, Chairman of the LGA Community Wellbeing Board, said:
“We are delighted to support the launch of ‘Health visiting in your community.’ This inspirational film highlights the vital support health visitors provide to babies, parents and families and exemplifies their key role in giving children the best start in life. The impact of this early support cannot be underestimated. It builds resilience, encourages healthy lifestyles and aids social and emotional development to allow children to thrive.”

Claire O’Meara, Head of UK Policy and Advocacy at the UK Committee for UNICEF (UNICEF UK) said:
“Health visiting is the back-bone of early childhood support across the UK, offering a vital safety net for all families. Health visitors are highly trained professionals, there to help parents and carers with everyday challenges of parenting through to addressing complex needs. However, this core service is worryingly over-stretched in England, leading to many babies and their families missing out on this critical support. The UK Committee for UNICEF (UNICEF UK) is calling on the UK Government to commit to a ‘National Baby and Toddler Guarantee’ to ensure every child has access the support they need to give them the best start in life.”

Joe McCulloch, Executive Producer at BBC Education, said:
“This film really helps us to appreciate how vital health visitors are – to babies, to children, to families, to parents, to communities, to the health service. Providing that personal, reassuring expertise is invaluable and long may health visitors continue to play such a pivotal role in so many areas.”

Georgina Mayes, iHV Policy and Quality Lead, and the film’s Executive Producer, said:
“I’m delighted that we are able to launch this fantastic new film which captures how health visitors support families through the unexpected twists and turns of early parenthood. Parenting is hard and nothing completely prepares you for it. Poverty, mental health problems and other worries can make parenting even harder. Small problems can grow into big problems if unaddressed and getting support early from a health visitor can make a big difference. What happens in the earliest years of a child’s life matters, as it is during this time that the foundations for future health and wellbeing are laid. When parents and carers are supported, babies and young children thrive, and then all of society thrives.”

Please share the film far and wide using #HealthVisitorsMatter #CelebratingHealthVisiting

Alongside our main film, ‘Health visiting in your community’, the iHV has also produced a shorter film ‘Voices from practice’. In this 2½ minute film, some of the health visitor ‘stars’ from our main film above share a bit more about why they chose to become a health visitor and what the role means to them.