Elizabeth Anionwu


Professor Dame Elizabeth Nneka Anionwu is a British nurse, health care administrator, lecturer, and Emeritus Professor of Nursing at University of West London.
In 1979, Anionwu became the United Kingdom's first sickle cell and thalassemia nurse specialist, helping establish the Brent Sickle Cell and Thalassaemia Counselling centre with Consultant Haematologist Dr Milica Brozovic. In 1998, by then a Professor of Nursing, Anionwu created the Mary Seacole Centre for Nursing Practice at the University of West London. She holds a PhD, was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire and is a Fellow of the RCN. She retired in 2007 and in 2016 published her memoirs, Mixed Blessings from a Cambridge Union.

Early life

Elizabeth Nneka Anionwu was born Elizabeth Mary Furlong in Birmingham, England, to an Irish mother and a Nigerian father. Her mother, Mary Maureen Furlong, was in her second year studying Classics at Newnham College, Cambridge University. Her father, Lawrence Odiatu Victor Anionwu, was studying Law at Cambridge University.
Her upbringing had been heavily affected by moving between institutions and family. She spent just over two years living with her mother, a relationship that ended when her stepfather, who did not accept her and drank heavily, started to physically abuse her. For much of her childhood, she was cared for by nuns, including several years in the Nazareth House convent in Birmingham.
Often harshly punished and humiliated for wetting the bed, she remembers being made to stand with a urine-soaked sheet over her head as a punishment for wetting the bed. In the book she recalls, that later in life when working as a health visitor, "I made sure to keep up-to-date with more humane treatments for bedwetting". Nonetheless, she grieved leaving the convent to go and live with her mother. Every period of relative stability in childhood ended in sudden collapse. Following an unsettled childhood she qualified as a nurse, then health visitor. Shortly before her 25th birthday she suddenly found her father: barrister and former Nigerian Ambassador to Italy and the Vatican, Lawrence Odiatu Victor Anionwu. She was to visit Nigeria frequently and later changed her surname to Anionwu.

Family

Anionwu has credited her father, Lawrence Anionwu, a barrister and diplomat, as the first person to provide her with career advice. Anionwu has one child, her daughter Azuka Oforka, an actress.

Career

Anionwu began her nursing career at a young age after being inspired by a nun who cared for her eczema. At the age of 16, she left school with seven O-levels and started to work as a school nurse assistant in Wolverhampton. Later on, she continued with her education to become a nurse, health visitor, and tutor. She travelled to the United States to study counselling for sickle cell and thalassemia centres as courses were not then available in the UK. In 1979 she worked with Dr Milica Brozovic to create the first UK sickle cell and thalassemia counselling centre in Brent. The opening of this counselling centre pioneered the opening of more than 30 centres in the UK using the Brent Centre as a model.
In 1990 at the Institute of Child Health, University College London, she was a lecturer and then later promoted to a senior lecturer. With the help of Professor Marcus Pembrey, Anionwu taught a course at the University College London that was for National Health Service staff members who worked with communities affected or at risk of sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, Tay–Sachs disease and thalassaemia.
in Whittington Hospital in north London.
Anionwu was appointed Dean of the School of Adult Nursing Studies and a Professor of Nursing at University of West London. Here she created the Mary Seacole Centre for Nursing Practice at the University of West London until her retirement in 2007. In 2001, Anionwu, along with Professor Atkin, wrote the book The Politics of Sickle Cell and Thalassemia. In 2005, she wrote a book, A Short History of Mary Seacole. In 2003 she became a Trustee and subsequently Vice-Chairperson of the Mary Seacole Memorial Statue Appeal. Following the unveiling of the statue at St Thomas' Hospital in June 2016 she was appointed a Life Patron of the Mary Seacole Trust.
Anionwu is also a Patron of other charities:
Throughout the course of her career, Anionwu has published many pieces of work. In 2016, she published a memoir called Mixed Blessing from a Cambridge Union.
Anionwu has published works related to her field of work and study in many journals. She has written informative pamphlets for family members of sickle cell patients, nurses who care for sickle cell patients, and information for the general population.

Selected writings

Anionwu was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2001 Birthday Honours for her services to nursing. In 2004 she was awarded the Fellowship Of the Royal College of Nursing for developing the sickle cell and thalassemia counselling centre. In 2007, following her retirement, she was appointed Emeritus Professor for Nursing at the University of West London.
In 2010 she was inducted into the Nursing Times Nursing Hall of Fame for the dedication to the Development of Nurse-led Services. She also received the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award on Divas of Colour. Anionwu was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to nursing and the Mary Seacole Statue Appeal. Anionwu was awarded a Fellowship of the Queen’s Nursing Institute in October 2017.
In 2019, Janet Jackson presented Anionwu the Lifetime Achievement Award, at Pride of Britain Awards for all her works as sickle and thalassaemia nurse .
On 31 May 2020 she was the subject of an episode of Desert Island Discs on BBC Radio 4.