Connect with us

Community

Limerick nursing sisters to celebrate International Nurses Day

Published

on

Limerick nursing sisters to celebrate International Nurses Day. Noelle Cregan, CNM1, St John’s Hospital, Limerick; Eileen Williams, CNM3, Nursing Manpower, HSE Mid West; Marie O’Brien, CNM2, Intensive Care Unit, UHL; Triona Neenan, RANP, Medical Oncology, UHL; and Angela O’Farrell, CNM2, Infection Prevention and Control, UHL. Photograph by Don Moloney

For five Limerick nursing sisters, the O’Keeffes from Athlacca in the heart of the Golden Vale, International Nurses Day is truly a family affair

Five sisters who are nurses at Limerick Hospitals with their children who are also nurses for International Nurses Day.  
IND is celebrated around the world every May 12, the anniversary of Florence Nightingale's birth.

All in the nursing family at Limerick Hospitals for International Nurses Day - Sisters from left: Noelle Cregan, CNM1, St John’s Hospital; Angela O’Farrell, CNM2, Infection Prevention and Control, UHL; Marie O’Brien, CNM2, Intensive Care Unit, UHL.; Eileen Williams, CNM3, Nursing Manpower, HSE Mid West; Triona Neenan, RANP, Medical Oncology, UHL, Limerick.
Pic: Don Moloney
Limerick nursing sisters to celebrate International Nurses Day. Noelle Cregan, CNM1, St John’s Hospital; Angela O’Farrell, CNM2, Infection Prevention and Control, UHL; Marie O’Brien, CNM2, Intensive Care Unit, UHL.; Eileen Williams, CNM3, Nursing Manpower, HSE Mid West; Triona Neenan, RANP, Medical Oncology, UHL, Limerick. Pic: Don Moloney

Joining the Mid West nursing workforce at various points since the 1980s, Eileen (Williams), Angela (O’Farrell), Marie (O’Brien), Triona (Neenan) and Noelle (Cregan) have amassed a total of more than 175 years’ nursing experience between them.

Following the example set by an earlier generation in their family (four of their aunts were nurses who trained and worked in hospitals in England and Cork), the siblings’ passion for nursing has now passed on to the next generation.

Eileen Williams’s son and daughter, Sam and Clodagh, Triona Neenan’s daughter Ciara, and Noelle Cregan’s son Patrick are all BSc Nursing Students at the School of Nursing & Midwifery in the University of Limerick. It doesn’t stop there: Angela O’Farrell’s daughters have entered nursing training at MTU Tralee, Emma in Mental Health Nursing and Aisling in General Nursing.


advertisement

advertisement


advertisement

advertisement


advertisement

advertisement


advertisement

advertisement

Eileen is a Clinical Nurse Manager (CNM2) in Nursing Manpower; Triona is a Registered Advanced Nurse Practitioner in Medical Oncology, UHL; Noelle is a CNM1 at St John’s Hospital; Angela is CNM2 in Infection Prevention and Control, UHL; and Marie, the first of the sisters to become a nurse, is a CNM2 in the Intensive Care Unit, UHL

The family will celebrate International Nurses Day with thousands of nurses across the region this Tuesday. May 12 is the anniversary of Florence Nightingale, who transformed nursing into a profession driven by compassion and science, and grounded in evidence, hygiene and education, which remain the bedrock of contemporary nursing and healthcare.

Triona Neenan (seated), RANP, Medical Oncology, UHL, Triona’s daughter Ciara Neenan, BSc Nursing Student, School of Nursing & Midwifery, UL; Angela O’Farrell (standing), CNM2, Infection Prevention and Control, UHL; Eileen Williams (seated), CNM3, Nursing Manpower, HSE Mid West, with her daughter and son, Clodagh Williams and Sam Williams, BSc Nursing Students, School of Nursing & Midwifery, UL (both seated); Marie O’Brien, CNM2, Intensive Care Unit, UHL.; Noelle Cregan, CNM1, St John’s Hospital, Limerick; with her son Patrick Cregan, BSc Nursing Student, School of Nursing & Midwifery, UL. Pic: Don Moloney

Ber Murphy, Chief Director of Nursing & Midwifery, Mid West Acute Hospitals, paid tribute to the Mid West nursing workforce for International Nurses Day: “This is your day; a day where we celebrate the legacy of Florence Nightingale, and your continuation of her principles through your commitment, empathy and tireless dedication to caring for other. Thank you for everything you do for our patients, and the difference you make not just today but every day.”

Ahead of International Nurses Day 2026, Triona Neenan, Registered Advanced Nurse Practitioner in Medical Oncology, UHL, reflected on the importance of nursing, what nursing offers as a career, and the attractiveness of nursing in the Mid West generally and UHL in particular.

Why is nursing important?

Triona Neenan said, “It’s difficult to sum it up succinctly, but what drew me in was when I spent a summer on work experience in a nursing home after I did my Leaving Cert. That was when I really first appreciated what people were able to do for others, simply by being kind, and the dignity and positive impact that that has for people, whether it was just feeding a patient some lunch, or straightening their tie, and the other more complex tasks. It’s just about helping people, and I absolutely loved it, and have never looked back.”

Would you recommend nursing as a career?

“One-hundred percent. However, it has to come from the person. Nursing is challenging and it’s not for everyone. I think back to myself at Leaving Cert age, and how I bridled when, because my older sisters were in nursing, relatives or friends told me that I would be nursing too. I was completely against it. But when I did work experience in a nursing home, I made the decision then, and have never looked back.

For 5 Limerick nursing sisters, the O’Keeffes from Athlacca in the the Golden Vale, International Nurses Day is truly a family affair
All in the nursing family at Limerick Hospitals for International Nurses Day – Sisters: Triona Neenan, RANP, Medical Oncology, UHL; Angela O’Farrell, CNM2, Infection Prevention and Control, UHL; Marie O’Brien, CNM2, Intensive Care Unit, UHL.; Eileen Williams, CNM3, Nursing Manpower, HSE Mid West and Noelle Cregan, CNM1, St John’s Hospital; Limerick pictured with their children who are also nursing students, Patrick Cregan, Ciara Neenan, Clodagh Williams (seated) and Sam Williams, BSc Nursing Students, School of Nursing & Midwifery, UL. Pic: Don Moloney

“Nursing is like a diving board into an ocean of opportunity, whether you go into management and admin or go for patient-focused frontline nursing, in the acutes, in community, education, pharmaceutical. And that opportunity is there right throughout your career. My own sister Eileen spent 30 years in theatre nursing, and is now in Nursing Manpower. Those opportunities for development are there throughout your lifetime of nursing.”

What is so special about nursing in UHL and the Mid West?

“The hospitals in the Mid West are growing and expanding, and they’re among the best in the country. I think all but 7-8 years of our collective experience has been in UHL. Obviously, there’s loyalty to the place where you trained, and the good relationships you develop with colleagues, and for us, there’s family. But ultimately, UHL is a damned good hospital with wonderful opportunities, and it’s up there with the best of them.”

For 5 Limerick nursing sisters, the O’Keeffes from Athlacca in the the Golden Vale, International Nurses Day is truly a family affair
All in the nursing family at Limerick Hospitals for International Nurses Day – Sisters from left: Noelle Cregan, CNM1, St John’s Hospital; Eileen Williams, CNM3, Nursing Manpower, HSE Mid West; Marie O’Brien, CNM2, Intensive Care Unit, UHL.; Triona Neenan, RANP, Medical Oncology, UHL, Limerick and Angela O’Farrell, CNM2, Infection Prevention and Control, UHL pictured with their children who are also nursing students, Sam Williams, Patrick Cregan, Clodagh Williams and Ciara Neenan BSc Nursing Students, School of Nursing & Midwifery, UL. Pic: Don Moloney

Richard is a presenter, producer, songwriter and actor. He was named the Limerick Person of the Year (2011) and won an online award at the Metro Éireann Media and Multicultural Awards (2011) for promoting multi-culturalism online. Richard says that the ilovelimerick.com concept is very much a community driven project that aims to document life in Limerick. So, that in 20 years time people can look back and remember the events that were making the headlines.