St. Camillus de Lellis Medals
St. Camillus de Lellis patron saint medals honor the man whose life became the foundation of professional nursing — a fitting first search for anyone buying a patron saint medal for a nurse or healthcare worker. Born in 1550 in Bucchianico, Italy, Camillus spent his early years as a soldier and struggled with a compulsive gambling habit that left him penniless and broken. A spiritual conversion at age twenty-five redirected his entire life toward the sick and dying. He founded the Camillians, the first religious order dedicated entirely to nursing the ill, and required his brothers to wear a bold red cross sewn onto their habits — a symbol that would later inspire Henry Dunant when he established the International Red Cross three centuries later. His feast day is celebrated on July 18.
Catholics in nursing, medicine, and hospital work wear a St. Camillus medal as a daily reminder that their labor is a vocation, not merely a career. The medal speaks to the belief that every patient encounter carries spiritual weight — a conviction Camillus himself lived out in the plague wards and battlefield hospitals of sixteenth-century Rome. Nurses, nursing students, EMTs, hospital chaplains, and home health aides all find particular meaning in this devotion. A St. Camillus medal necklace makes an exceptionally personal gift for a nursing school graduation, for the moment a new RN receives her license, or for a healthcare worker marking a career milestone. Explore our patron saint of nurses collection for additional options.
Every St. Camillus medal in our collection is crafted in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing and backed by a lifetime guarantee. Choose from sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, or 14kt solid gold, with multiple sizes and chain lengths to suit any preference. If you are also shopping for a physician or surgeon, our St. Luke medals pair beautifully with the St. Camillus line. Orders over $40 ship free, and every piece arrives gift-ready.

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Frequently Asked Questions
Who is St. Camillus de Lellis the patron saint of?
St. Camillus de Lellis is the patron saint of nurses, the sick, hospitals, and healthcare workers — a patronage formally declared by Pope Leo XIII in 1886. He earned this title by founding the Camillians in 1582, the first religious order in history whose sole mission was nursing the ill, and by personally serving in plague wards and battlefield hospitals across Italy. He is widely regarded as the male patron of nursing, often paired with St. Agatha as the female counterpart, and his feast day is celebrated on July 18.
Did St. Camillus de Lellis inspire the Red Cross symbol?
Yes — the red cross that Camillus required his Camillian brothers to wear on their black habits is directly linked to the symbol Henry Dunant adopted when he founded the International Red Cross in 1863. Dunant was familiar with the Camillian order and their centuries-long use of the red cross as a mark of care for the wounded and dying. While the International Red Cross officially attributes its emblem to an inversion of the Swiss flag, many historians of Catholic nursing acknowledge the Camillian red cross as a significant antecedent. Wearing a St. Camillus medal today connects the wearer to that four-hundred-year lineage of organized compassionate care.
What is a good gift for a nursing school graduation?
A St. Camillus de Lellis patron saint medal necklace is one of the most personally meaningful gifts you can give at a nursing school graduation or pinning ceremony. Unlike generic jewelry, it connects the new nurse to a specific tradition — the same red cross Camillus's brothers wore in sixteenth-century Rome now worn by a new clinician entering the profession today. Our medals are available in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold, so you can match the gift to the graduate's taste and your budget, and every order over $40 ships free in gift-ready packaging.
Is St. Camillus de Lellis the only patron saint of nurses?
St. Camillus de Lellis is the primary male patron saint of nurses, but he is not the only saint associated with nursing and care for the sick. St. Agatha is venerated as a female patron of nurses, and St. John of God is the patron of hospitals and hospital workers specifically. Many Catholic healthcare workers wear medals of more than one patron, and nursing programs with Catholic roots often honor several of these saints throughout the academic year. A St. Camillus medal pairs particularly well with a St. Agatha medal as a gift set for a female nursing graduate.
What did St. Camillus de Lellis found, and why does it matter for nurses today?
St. Camillus founded the Order of Clerks Regular, Ministers to the Sick — known as the Camillians — in Rome in 1582, making it the first religious order in history organized specifically around professional nursing care. Before the Camillians, hospital attendants were largely untrained laborers with no vocational commitment to the work; Camillus introduced standards of compassionate, skilled bedside care that prefigured modern nursing ethics by nearly three centuries. For nurses today, the Camillian legacy is a reminder that their profession has deep roots in a spirituality of presence and service, not merely in clinical technique.
Are the St. Camillus medals at rosarycard.net made in the USA?
Yes — every St. Camillus de Lellis medal sold at rosarycard.net is made in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing, one of the country's most trusted producers of Catholic religious jewelry. Each medal is backed by a lifetime guarantee against manufacturing defects, and you can choose from sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, or 14kt solid gold depending on your preference and budget. Free shipping is included on all orders over $40, and every piece arrives in packaging suitable for gifting directly at a pinning ceremony, graduation, or feast day celebration.
The Story of St. Camillus de Lellis
Camillus de Lellis was born on May 25, 1550, in Bucchianico, in the Abruzzo region of Italy, to a military family. He followed his father into soldiering and fought in campaigns across the Mediterranean, but a chronic leg wound he had suffered in battle refused to heal, forcing him into the hospital of San Giacomo in Rome as a patient. He was eventually dismissed from the hospital for disruptive behavior, and for years afterward he drifted between military service and compulsive gambling, losing everything he owned more than once. The turning point came in February 1575 when, while hauling sand for the Capuchin friars at Manfredonia, he experienced a profound conversion. He attempted to enter the Capuchins twice but was rejected each time because his leg wound had never closed. Instead, he returned to San Giacomo as a hospital administrator and saw firsthand how callously the sick were treated by poorly paid, indifferent attendants. Determined to change this, he founded the Camillians — formally the Order of Clerks Regular, Ministers to the Sick — in 1582. Members of the order wore a large red cross on their black habits, and they served on battlefields, in plague zones, and in the hospitals of Rome and Naples. That red cross became internationally recognized as the symbol of care for the wounded, directly influencing the emblem Henry Dunant adopted for the International Red Cross in 1863. Camillus was canonized in 1746 and declared patron of the sick, nurses, and hospitals by Pope Leo XIII in 1886.
Why Catholics Wear a St. Camillus de Lellis Medal
The spiritual tradition of wearing a St. Camillus medal is rooted in the belief that healthcare workers carry out a ministry of presence — standing with the suffering the way Camillus himself stood in plague wards when others fled. The medal typically depicts Camillus in his Camillian habit, the prominent red cross visible on his chest, often shown ministering to a patient or holding a cross. Some versions include the Latin inscription Ora Pro Nobis — Pray for Us — along the reverse edge. For nurses and other clinicians, the red cross on the medal is not merely decorative; it connects the wearer to a four-century lineage of consecrated caregiving that predates modern medicine. Many nursing schools and hospitals with Catholic roots distribute St. Camillus medals at pinning ceremonies precisely because the imagery speaks to the vocational dimension of the work. Wearing the medal is also a private act of intercession — a request that Camillus continue to advocate before God for the patients in one's care and for the strength to serve them well on the hardest shifts. The medal is equally meaningful for home health aides, hospice nurses, and hospital chaplains who accompany the dying, since Camillus himself ministered extensively to those in their final hours.
Our St. Camillus de Lellis Medal Collection
Every St. Camillus medal at rosarycard.net is made in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing, a company with decades of experience producing Catholic religious jewelry to exacting standards. Our collection is available in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold, with medal sizes ranging from petite round pendants suitable for everyday wear to larger oval formats that display the saint's imagery with greater detail. Chain lengths run from 18 to 24 inches, accommodating both scrub-neck and dress-collar wear. All medals come with a lifetime guarantee against manufacturing defects, and orders over $40 ship free. If you are building a gift set for a nursing graduate, consider pairing a St. Camillus medal with one from our patron saint of nurses landing page, which curates the most popular options across all nursing-related saints. For those shopping for a broader healthcare team, our St. John of God medals honor the patron of hospitals and hospital workers, and our St. Agatha medals are frequently given alongside St. Camillus medals as a complementary pair for female nursing graduates.
Giving a St. Camillus Medal as a Gift
The single most popular moment to give a St. Camillus medal is nursing school graduation — specifically the pinning ceremony that caps the program, where a mentor places a pin on the new nurse as a symbol of entering the profession. A sterling silver or gold-filled St. Camillus necklace handed to a new graduate at that ceremony carries weight that a generic gift card cannot match. The second natural occasion is RN licensure: the weeks between passing the NCLEX and receiving the official license are filled with anticipation, and a medal given at that threshold moment becomes a keepsake tied to a specific memory. Healthcare worker appreciation events — Nurses Week in May, National Healthcare Worker Appreciation Day, and individual hospital milestone anniversaries — are also strong gifting moments, particularly for charge nurses, nurse educators, and unit managers who are harder to shop for. Camillus's feast day on July 18 falls squarely in summer nursing school graduation season, making it a natural liturgical anchor for gift-giving. Buyers are typically parents, spouses, clinical mentors, and nursing school faculty. Every order from rosarycard.net arrives in gift-ready packaging, and free shipping applies to all orders over $40.















