Gina Higginbottom

British academic, nurse, and midwife From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gina Marie Higginbottom MBE (née Awoko) is a British academic, nurse, midwife, health visitor and a specialist in international migration and maternity. She is the first nurse of black and minority ethnic (BME) origin to hold a professorial role in a Russell Group university in England.[1][2][3][4]

Born
Gina Awoko

Sheffield, England, UK
TitleProfessor
AwardsNational Primary Care Fellowship

Smith & Nephew Nursing Research Scholar

Mary Seacole Leadership Award

Canada Research Chair

Fellow Queens Nursing Institute

Fellow American Academy of Nursing
Quick facts Dr Gina HigginbottomMBE, Born ...
Dr Gina Higginbottom
Born
Gina Awoko

Sheffield, England, UK
TitleProfessor
AwardsNational Primary Care Fellowship

Smith & Nephew Nursing Research Scholar

Mary Seacole Leadership Award

Canada Research Chair

Fellow Queens Nursing Institute

Fellow American Academy of Nursing
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Sheffield
Academic work
DisciplineHealth
Sub-discipline
Ethnicity and Community Health
InstitutionsUniversity of Alberta, University of Nottingham
Websitehttps://ginahigginbottom.com
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Personal life and education

Higginbottom was born in Sheffield and is of white British and Ghanaian origin (Ga-Mashie, Jamestown, Accra. She is via her maternal family a descendant of the historic Bagley family. Edward Bagley of Dudley, executed the will of Lady Barnham, granddaughter of William Shakespeare [5] She passed the eleven plus examination and attended King Ecgbert Technical Grammar School for Girls.[5] Her cousin is Richard Kirk of Cabaret Voltaire and her brother in Law Martin Fry of ABC. She gained her PhD co-supervised by Prof James Nazroo at the University of Sheffield in 2004.[6] Higginbottom was the first BME nurse to be awarded a National Primary Care Fellowship.[7]

Career

From 2007 to 2015 Higginbottom held a Tier II Canada Research Chair in Ethnicity and Health at the University of Alberta.[8][9][10][11] She is the first woman of BME origin to hold a Canada Research Chair.[12]

Higginbottom was appointed in 2015 as the Mary Seacole Professor of Ethnicity and Community Health at the University of Nottingham.[13] As of 2019, she is now Emeritus Professor.[14][5] She was ethnicity and health advisor, co-author of the critical research study on the Apgar score and other neonatal tests and infants with darker skin which challenged existing approaches to neonatal assessment.

She is Co-Convener of International Collaboration for Community Health Nursing Research (ICCHNR), a charity and professional organisation.[15] She is also a member of the Chief Nurse for England's Black Minority Ethnic Advisory Group.[12] In 2019 she became a vice-president of the Community Practitioners’ and Health Visitors’ Association (CPHVA), a professional organisation and trade union for nurses, together with Sara Rowbotham.[3][4]

Honours

Higginbottom was awarded an MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) in the Queen's Birthday Honours list in 1998 for services to health promotion and young people.[16]

Selected works

References

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