We're delighted to be welcoming speakers from across the country to share their experience and knowledge at this year's ANNP & NNA Conferences.
Below you can find out when our speakers will appear in the conference programmes, or read more about each speaker in their bio.
Adele Farrow
Adele Farrow
Adele is the Lead ANNP at Great Western Hospital in Swindon, with over 12 years previous experience in a tertiary centre.
Working within a local level two neonatal unit, she is responsible for supporting often very junior medical staff and nurses and trainee ANNPs with limited neonatal intensive care experience. She is currently developing the newly introduced role of the ANNP within the unit and line managing both qualified and trainee ANNPs. Service improvement is quickly becoming a large part of her work, including the transitional care project and Black Maternity Matters.
Adele is an ARNI and NLS instructor and also enjoys teaching midwives, nurses and junior doctors on local programmes.
Having successfully completed a Scholarship with the NNA she has developed a deeper understanding of the work that the NNA do and support they can provide. She has enjoyed sharing her project at local events and national conferences.
Alison Leary
Alison Leary
Professor Alison Leary MBE FRCN currently holds the position of Professor of Healthcare & Workforce Modelling at London South Bank University and serves as a Senior Consultant to the World Health Organization on Human Resources for Health Group. She has worked across many different industries and her current work focuses on complex systems in healthcare, using non-linear mathematics and data science to improve workforce planning and patient safety, For example, her modelling for inflammatory bowel disease nursing led to a recommended staffing ratio that became a European standard. She was appointed MBE in 2019 by the British government for services to crowd safety in English Football. She is a Fellow of the Royal College of Nursing and the Queen’s Nursing Institute. She was named among the Top 70 women in health in 70 years of the NHS and the recipient of a Winston Churchill Memorial Trust Fellowship to study big data in high-reliability industries.
Ana Gomez Corrales
Ana Gomez Corrales
Ana is a compassionate and experienced ANNP with a dedicated focus on evidence-based, family-integrated care and service innovation. Her multifaceted career spans across clinical practice, academic research, and education, enabling her to bridge the gap between theory and practice with impact.
In her current role as Research Fellow in Simulation at the University of Exeter, Ana plays a pivotal role in advancing healthcare education. She contributes to the design, delivery, and evaluation of simulation-based learning, working across undergraduate nursing and medical imaging programmes. Her work supports both curriculum innovation and faculty development, including the integration of immersive technologies such as virtual reality into teaching.
Ana has co-authored systematic reviews and led quasi-experimental studies, presenting her research internationally. These experiences have not only enhanced her academic rigor but also deepened her understanding of how experiential learning improves clinical decision-making and patient outcomes.
Committed to educational excellence, Ana earned a Certificate in Advanced Study in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, and was awarded Associate Fellowship by Advance HE. She has also been a valued guest lecturer at institutions such as City, University of London and the University of the West of England, contributing to postgraduate midwifery education on neonatal physiopathology and highlighting the interplay between neonatal and maternity care.
Andrea Mayes
Andrea Mayes
Andrea has been an ANNP for 16 years and has worked in level two and level three neonatal units as well as within a transport setting.
Current roles include:
- Senior ANNP covering Tier 2 role within an LNU
- NLS and ARNI instructor
- Leading local response to BAPM document “Neonatal support for freestanding MLUs and Home Births”.
- QI ANNP lead, supporting a number of projects from a clinical perspective.
- Works closely with maternity colleagues and MLUs to deliver newborn life support training.
- Completing audits of clinical practices such as intubation and compliance with national guidelines.
Andrea is extremely clinical focused and passionate about delivering high quality evidence based care to all patients.
Annemarie Lodder
Annemarie Lodder
Annemarie is a social scientist with a PhD in Psychology who has worked with parents and families on various research studies aimed at reducing inequalities in health and well-being. She is currently the Parent, Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement Lead for the Pregnancy and Prematurity theme of Imperial’s Biomedical Research Centre. In this role, she works closely with parents and former patients to ensure their voices are heard and incorporated into neonatal research, helping to make neonatal medicine and care more inclusive and meaningful for the people it matters to most.
Beatriz Afonso
Beatriz Afonso
Bea is a Network Education Facilitator, appointed in September 2022. She is a neonatal nurse with over nine years of clinical experience, underpinned by an adult nursing background. Her career has been based in a busy London Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, where she developed expertise in caring for extremely premature infants and babies with complex needs, alongside a strong focus on clinical education.
Passionate about improving neonatal outcomes, Bea promotes learning through simulation and practice-based teaching. She has recently taken on the leadership of the Pan London Enhanced Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Module, which offers an alternative career pathway beyond the Neonatal Qualification in Specialty (QiS).
Claire Inglis
Claire Inglis
Claire has 28 years’ experience of Neonatal nursing & has been Lead Nurse (Matron) for Neonatal Homecare for a region of central England covering Leicester & local hospitals Kettering & Northampton since 2018. Claire has implemented innovative community care solutions to redirect hospital-based care to the home for babies requiring tube-feeding, oxygen dependent babies & more recently babies in need of phototherapy for the treatment of jaundice.
Claire has also promoted parent education aimed at reducing infant mortality (the STORK Programme)
The activity levels of babies receiving such care in Claire’s region are amongst the highest seen in the UK.
The East Midlands regional or network-based approach thus uses a hub & spoke model, with a lead centre supporting smaller hospitals in the implementation of new homecare services.
Colm Darby
Colm Darby
My name is Colm Darby and I work as an Advanced Neonatal Nurse Practitioner within the Southern Health and Social Care Trust at Craigavon Area Hospital in Northern Ireland. I’ve worked at this neonatal unit for over 12 years and has been involved in various studies within this time. As an ANNP I was awarded the Neonatal Nurses Association UK Neonatal Nurse of the Year in 2017 for my work on regional implementation of a hypoglycemia protocol which saw a decrease in neonatal admissions and increase breastfeeding practices across Northern Ireland.
I am an advocate for the newborn infant and their families with a role as the Regional Lead for the Neonatal Nurses Association in Northern Ireland and Executive Board Member. I have recently begun the role of as an Associate Principle Investigator for SurfON trial, the first nurse to hold this position in Northern Ireland. I’ve developed my research career in the ANNP role through multiple publications, a UK consensus paper on LISA administration, vaccine hesitancy and I’m currently undertaking a PhD in understanding PTSD prevalence in parents during their neonatal journey in Northern Ireland.
Cristina Martin
Cristina Martin
Cristina is a Network Education Facilitator in the London ODN. A registered nurse since 2002, she holds MScs in Neonatal Advanced Practice, Adult Intensive Care, Leadership and Management, and Clinical Research. She is also an independent prescriber and is currently completing her PhD.
Her international career spans A&E, ITU, and Neonatal care, alongside experience as Clinical Specialist Lead in a pharmaceutical company, where she contributed to global teaching and research. Cristina has lectured at the Complutense University in Spain and the University of East Anglia, and she currently holds an honorary contract with Kingston University.
Actively engaged in regional and national projects, Cristina promotes education and knowledge-sharing to advance healthcare quality, safety, diversity, and equity.
Diane Keeling
Diane Keeling
Diane is a Neonatal Consultant Practitioner within the tertiary neonatal unit at University Hospitals Plymouth (UHP) providing strategic leadership for neonatal services.
Her current roles include:
- The lead for education within the ANNP specialist interest group at the NNA.
- Part of the working party for the RCPCH/NHSe Paediatric Curriculum Framework for Advanced Practice.
- Participates in national projects and directives that impact neonatal service provision.
- NLS and ARNI instructor
Diane brings a wealth of knowledge of the current educational opportunities for trainee and qualified ANNPs and current developments that will no doubt shape the future workforce within the neonatal setting.
Gessica Rice
Gessica Rice
I am Gessica Rice, an Advanced Neonatal Nurse Practitioner (ANNP) currently working as Lead ANNP at the Regional Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), St Michael’s Hospital, Bristol. I have over 15 years of experience in neonatal nursing, including the past 8 years within advanced practice. I have enjoyed developing my career working in level 2 and tertiary level neonatal units, as well as in Neonatal Transport within the Southwest Neonatal Advice and Retrieval service (SoNAR).
In my current lead role, I have the opportunity to fulfil my passion of supporting others entering and progressing within neonatal nursing and advanced practice. I am committed to developing the ANNP role, influencing service delivery and driving quality improvement within neonatal care and wider perinatal services.
Hannah Jennings
Hannah Jennings
I qualified from Uni of Herts in 2016 and began my journey as a qualified paediatric nurse working in the neonatal unit at Lister Hospital (ENHT, Herts). A year after, I commenced the Neonatal Intensive Care course at Bedford Uni and then consolidated this within the NICU for 3 years. In this time I also joined the NNA as an executive member, which was a fantastic experience. In 2020 a secondment came up in the Children's Safeguarding Team, which was always a keen interest of mine and so I applied for the job and was successful. After a few short months, a band 7 permanent job became available for the Child Protection Specialist Nurse and Lead Trainer, which is where I remain now! I absolutely love my job and the variety it brings between clinical work, the specialist role and also having the ability to train and educate so many staff regarding safeguarding and the importance of this, regardless of your job role and where you are based. I of course, have a strong interest in safeguarding in NICU, but also exploitation. I am truly passionate about being able to support children, young people and their families.
Hannah Wells
Hannah Wells
Hannah Wells is a Neonatal Surgical Clinical Nurse Specialist with thirteen years of experience working as part of the Neonatal Surgical Team in Southampton. A proud alumna of Southampton University, she laid the foundations of her career with a clear vision for patient care and has continued to study, undertaking masters’ modules and a Florence Nightingale Leadership programme to further her development. Dedication to the field was recognised when she became the first recipient of the Neonatal Nurses Association’s Surgical Scholarship with the project entitled ‘Neonatal Surgical Network.’
Hannah works closely with the multidisciplinary team to ensure family integrated care is delivered with respect and compassion. Beyond the bedside, Hannah invests her energy into research and education helping to shape the next generation of neonatal nurses and advocating for best practices across the network.
Katie Hanafin
Katie Hanafin
Katie Hanafin, MSc, ANNP
Katie is an Advanced Neonatal Nurse Practitioner with over two decades of experience in neonatal intensive care. She began her career in London when qualifying as a paediatric nurse at City University in 2004. She then moved back to the North East of England to work in University Hospital North Tees, dedicating the first decade of her practice to bedside care in a busy level 3 NICU. In 2014, she completed a Master’s degree in Advanced Neonatal Care, transitioning into the role of Nurse Practitioner to expand her scope in delivering high-level, family-centred care to critically ill newborns.
Since 2019, Katie has been based in Abu Dhabi, where she works as part of a multidisciplinary neonatal team in a busy level 3 NICU in a leading quaternary hospital, contributing to both clinical excellence and professional development initiatives. Passionate about education, collaborative practice, and advancing neonatal outcomes, she continues to support evidence-based care and mentors the next generation of neonatal clinicians.
Kirsty Jane
Kirsty Jane
Kirsty Jane is a specialist Music Therapist with enhanced knowledge in newborn behavioural observations and neonatal palliative care. Kirsty developed the therapies service at Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospice and neonatal music therapy services that create therapeutic pathways from neonatal units at Great Ormond Street, University College London and Barnet hospitals to hospice care. In June 2023 Kirsty was awarded an NIHR Doctoral Clinical Academic Fellowship to co-design a music therapy program to support key aspects of continuing bonds for parents with babies with uncertain futures on neonatal units. She is dedicated to increasing the acceptability and accessibility of psychological support in perinatal palliative care and promoting the value of collaborating with people with lived experience to develop healthcare services.
Rachel Lomax
Rachel Lomax
Rachel was an ANNP in transport from 2011 where she was an autonomous clinical practitioner, had team leadership responsibilities and was the lead for risk management. She completed the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Programme with an MSc in Healthcare Leadership and since December 2024 she has been the Deputy Associate Director of Nursing and Therapies for children’s services at Morecambe Bay. Rachel is very passionate about leadership and management and the impact it has on the workforce, service delivery and patient care.
Rebecca Chilvers
Rebecca Chilvers
Rebecca Chilvers is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Psychology Lead for the EOE Neonatal ODN. She has worked in neonatal care for 10 years during which time she has worked with many hundreds of families and members of neonatal teams. She has been involved in developing psychological provision and thinking in the NHS as well as working with the third sector, creatives and media professionals to make neonatal care more visible and understood to the wider public.
Follow on X: @neonatalpsych
Rhiannon Jones
Rhiannon Jones
Rhiannon is an Advanced Clinical Practitioner from the neonatal unit at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children. She has over 15 years' experience as a neonatal surgical nurse. She is currently the educational lead for the National Neonatal Surgical Interest Group (one of the NNA Specialist Interest Groups) and was lead author in the publication of a best practice framework for care of neonates with oesophageal atresia and tracheo-oesophageal fistula.
Ruth Butterworth
Ruth Butterworth
Ruth is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist and the Lead Psychologist for the North West Neonatal ODN.
She has codeveloped and led a range of services supporting the psychological wellbeing of babies and their families and has a particular passion for embedding the principles of psychologically informed care across the whole system by working with staff teams. In her non ODN days she works on a range of projects that provide training, supervision and spaces for people to think compassionately and collaboratively together.
Tendai Nzirawa
Tendai Nzirawa
Tendai Nzirawa FRCN, RN, RSCN, BSc, MSc
Maternity Clinical Improvement Lead
Health Innovation East
Fellow EoE CNO CMidO BME Strategy Advisory Group
East of England Neonatal Nurses Association Regional Lead
Chairperson of the PPLOG (Paediatric Pan London Oxygen Group).
Tendai has joined the board as Equity, Diversity & Inclusion Lead. She is passionate about improving patient care and making all services as safe as possible without compromising quality.
Tendai continues pushing for better in health care service delivery and leads various programmes in the East of England, one of them is reducing health inequalities within maternity and neonatal services & equality for all staff especially ethnic minorities, most deprived, disabilities and LGBTQ+. Finalist of the Looking Beyond programme: HRH The Prince of Wales Award for Integrated Approaches to Care: Nursing Times Awards 2021 and highly commended for the Gopi Menon BAPM Awards as part of the Addressing Inequalities BAPM Conference.
Recently Tendai has been working in collaboration with Consultant Obstetrician Dr Jasmine Leonce, Wendy Olayiwola BEM, FRCM, RN, RM. National Maternity Lead for Equality, Regional Maternity Team, Chief Midwife Wendy Matthews OBE, and maternity & neonatal colleagues working in hospitals & LMNS to develop and deliver a Maternity & Neonatal Ethnic Minority Band 5-7 6 months Leadership development programme. This was Shortlisted for Outstanding Achievement of the Year award in 2023 National BAME Health and Care Awards.
Become a member of the NNA today
Come and join a growing community of neonatal nurses and feel supported, heard and valued!