UAE-based nurse nominated for Aster Guardians Global Nursing Award 2025 with $250,000 prize

The 10 shortlisted for the prize were selected from a record-breaking 100,000 applicants from 199 countries. (Supplied)
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Updated 08 May 2025
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UAE-based nurse nominated for Aster Guardians Global Nursing Award 2025 with $250,000 prize

  • Filipino nurse says he will use money for cancer research if he wins

DUBAI: A UAE nurse shortlisted for the Aster Guardian Global Nursing Award 2025 has said that he will not spend a cent of the $250,000 prize money on himself, but instead on pediatric cancer research.

Fitz Gerald Dalina Camacho has been shortlisted for the award, which includes the quarter-of-a-million dollar prize.

The 10 shortlisted for the prize were selected from a record-breaking 100,000 applicants from 199 countries.

The only candidate working in the UAE and wider Arab world, Camacho is listed with nine other nurses in the running for the annual award, which celebrates their dedication and skill. 

The Filipino nurse learned about the nomination during a shift at work. “I was shocked when my parents and friends sent me the links on social media. I did not expect to be nominated,” Camacho said.

Despite his modesty, Camacho has an extremely decorated career. After starting his pediatrics training in the Philippines, he moved to the Gulf, first in Saudi Arabia.

“It was quite a transition for me moving to Saudi,” Camacho said. “But it is a very good foundational place where the learning is very (well) supported.”

He has been stationed in the UAE for 11 years and is currently a duty manager at Mediclinic City Hospital in Dubai.

Since starting this post, Camacho has taken it on himself to upskill his nursing colleagues in areas where they might lack experience; especially in different age groups.

“I started an initiative of upskilling our nurses, and training them in terms of rehabilitation and intensive care,” he explained. “If they were an adult nurse, I have skilled them to pediatric and if they were pediatric, I have skilled them to adult.”

But Camacho said that he wants to make a move in his career from education to research so he could pursue one of his passions — pediatric care.

“I’ve seen how patients with cancer struggle,” Camacho said, “So if I were chosen as the winner, then I would use the money for pediatric cancer patients back home in the Philippines.”

The final round of the award will include interviews from a distinguished grand jury. After voting, the winner will be announced at a gala event in Dubai on May 26.


US climber scales Taiwan’s tallest building Taipei 101 without ropes

Updated 57 min 11 sec ago
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US climber scales Taiwan’s tallest building Taipei 101 without ropes

  • ‘Free solo’ ascent organized and shown live by Netflix
  • Taipei 101 was once tallest building in the world

TAIPEI: US climber Alex Honnold scaled the Taipei 101 skyscraper without ropes or safety netting on Sunday, watched by thousands of cheering and waving fans as he clambered up one of the world’s tallest buildings.
“Sick,” Honnold said as he got to the top spire of Taiwan’s tallest building after his 91-minute “free solo” ascent, which was organized and broadcast live by Netflix.
“What a beautiful way to see Taipei,” he told reporters after his mission, which ‌was postponed by ‌a day due to wet weather.
The 508-meter (1,667-foot) ‌Taipei ⁠101, which dominates ‌the city’s skyline and is a major tourist attraction, was the tallest building in the world from 2004 to 2010, a crown currently held by the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
The climb, with no safety equipment, took place with the full support and permission of Taipei 101 and the city government.
Honnold said he had once thought of climbing the structure without permission.
“But then ⁠out of respect for the building and respect for all the people on the team ‌who’d allowed me access to look ‍at it, I was like, well ‍obviously I’m not going to poach this, I’m going to respect the ‍people and just see if it ever comes together.”
Executive Producer James Smith said it was rare for a building to trust a climber and allow such an event to take place, calling Taipei 101 “a real icon of this country.”
Taiwanese politicians took to social media to thank Honnold and Netflix for putting Taiwan — more accustomed to featuring in global ⁠headlines for its semiconductor prowess or Chinese military threats — in the international spotlight with such a different perspective.
“Congratulations to the brave, fearless Alex for completing the challenge,” President Lai Ching-te wrote on his Facebook page.
“Through Netflix’s live broadcast cameras, the world didn’t just see Taipei 101 — it also saw the warmth and passion of the Taiwanese people, and the beautiful hills and scenery of this land,” he added.
This is not the first time Taipei 101 has been scaled.
In 2004, French climber Alain Robert, dubbed “Spiderman” for his ropeless ascents of some of the world’s highest skyscrapers, climbed the ‌building, though did so with a safety rope in a time of four hours.