I end 2025 with news that a very good friend Jennifer Bourne sadly passed away earlier this month. Such a tragic loss not only to all her family and friends, but also the nursing community. I've been able to reflect on what Jenny's friendship and also her knowledge and skill meant to me and the wider travel medicine community.
THE START OF JENNY'S CAREER AS AN FGM SPECIALIST
Jenny's career as a nurse working in the field of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) started back in October 1999 when she became a Clinical Nurse Specialist in FGM at Waltham Forest PCT in London, a role she fulfilled for over 10 years. This involved working with girls and women who experienced or were at risk of FGM. The team developed the service to include youth and community work, working within schools and providing a specialist clinical service. This was recognised in Europe as a model of good practice and they won several awards including an Innovative and Creative Practice Award with the Queens Nursing Institute (QNI now named the QICN). Jenny attended the European Parliament twice to share the work with the EU Network Against FGM. She also visited Somaliland with others from the UK to see the work being done to stop FGM. In 2001, she went to New York with a UK delegation to attend the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.
A move to Cornwall in 2013, led Jenny to achieve training, knowledge and counselling skills as an independent sexual violence adviser providing support to female and male victims of sexual violence. During those four years, Jenny was also part of a working group for the UK Department of Health looking at providing a care pathway and guidance for health visitors, midwives and school nurses, working with women and children where violence may be present.
Jenny then spent 10 years from 2004 to 2014 in education, providing specialist training to all agencies around FGM and other forms of gender-based violence. This included specialist training to support professionals working with victims of sexual and domestic violence.
MY CONNECTION WITH JENNY
I didn't meet Jenny until early 2015, by which time she was in the role of Project Manager and FGM Safeguarding Lead at the Department of Health and NHS England. I recall going to visit her for the first time in the Department of Health, which was situated in one of their offices at the Elephant and Castle site.
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| Jenny in her leadership role with the Department of Health and NHS England |
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| Jenny and Leyla speaking at the RCPSG |
The following year an e learning course specifically for travel medicine practitioners was developed by a group of travel health specialist nurses, made available on the RCPSG digital store and has been used by practitioners on a regular basis since its launch in 2018 - not only in the UK, but around the world. An article was also written for travel medicine practitioners by Ann McDonald - see here.
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| A second trip to Kenya in 2019, this time accompanied by one of her granddaughters. |
CONCLUDING THOUGHTS


