Nursing & Midwifery Workforces: Critical UHC contributions
Central to the achievement of the Agenda for Sustainable Development is an adequate, equitably distributed and fully supported health workforce. Nurses are the largest occupational group and represent an indispensable force with which to combat inequities in access to health services and progress towards health-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), while advancing gender equality through the strengthening and empowerment of a highly feminized profession.
The 2025 edition of the State of the world’s nursing report, launched on International Nurses Day, 12 May 2025, provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date analysis of the nursing workforce. The report features new indicators on critical areas for nursing, such as education capacity, advanced practice nursing and remuneration. In addition to the 12 policy priorities from the Global strategic directions for nursing and midwifery 2021–2025, there are five additional policy priorities and a compilation of data from each WHO region. Country profiles reflect each country’s national data and are available for download from the WHO National Health Workforce Accounts data portal by selecting the country name within the filters.
Publications
All
State of the world's nursing 2020: investing in education, jobs and leadership (Annex)
This background paper provides a synthesis of the contemporary evidence base on the roles and responsibilities of nurses contributing to Goal 3 of the...

The State of the world’s nursing 2020 report provides the latest, most up-to-date evidence on and policy options for the global nursing workforce,...

Simulation training in nursing and midwifery education
This guide aims to support nursing and midwifery educators who want to initiate the use of simulation as an educational strategy.
Events
News
Regional publications

The WHO South-East Asia Region has made significant progress towards ending preventable maternal and newborn deaths. Between 2000 and 2019, the...

Regional Strategic Directions for strengthening Midwifery in the South-East Asia Region 2020–2024
Member States in the Region are making progress. Bangladesh, India and Nepal have in recent years introduced midwifery education. They joined...

The Regional Professional Regulatory Framework (RPRF) is in part a step towards creating a means for implementing the World Health Assembly (WHA)...
Additional technical documents
- The Strategic Importance of National Investment in Nursing Professionals in the Region of the Americas
- Technical brief on strengthening the nursing and midwifery workforce to improve health outcomes: Government Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officers (GCNMOs) in the WHO European Region
- The nursing and midwifery workforce in the African Region: optimizing and accelerating investments for resilient health systems: a regional technical report 2022
- Nurse workforce sustainability in small countries: monitoring mobility, managing retention. Policy brief
- Facilitating evidence-based practice in nursing and midwifery in the WHO European Region
- Strategic Directions for Nursing in the Region of the Americas (2019)