The NHS Trust has dropped a disciplinary case against a U.K. Christian nurse who was suspended after publicly criticizing a warning she had received from the Trust for “misgendering” a biological male who had been convicted of pedophilia and identified as female.
Jennifer Melle, a 40-year-old nurse employed at St. Helier Hospital in southern England, received a written warning from the NHS after she refused to use a patient’s preferred pronouns. Security intervened after the patient physically threatened her and used racial slurs against Melle, who immigrated from Uganda.
The hospital gave Melle a written warning in October 2024 and referred her to the Nursing and Midwifer Council for “misgendering” the patient. Melle spoke to a media outlet about her experience in March 2025, which brought about national attention. She was then investigated for a “potential data breach” and suspended from her job, including being escorted from the hospital and barred from returning.
While she was suspended, the NHS updated its policy to categorize “misgendering” as a misconduct.
A disciplinary hearing for Melle was scheduled for December 2025 to consider termination from her role. However, the hearing was canceled after political intervention, including a statement from Claire Coutinho MP, who said punishing Melle would be a “grave injustice.”
Christian Concern, who represented Melle in the case, confirmed in a Jan. 21 press release that Epsom and St. Helier Hospital had dropped the data breach case, would reinstate Melle and would no longer take further action against her.
In a press release, Melle said she was “especially grateful” to Christian Concern and Claire Coutino.
“I am deeply relieved and grateful to hear that Epsom and St Helier Hospital has confirmed it will take no further action against me,” Melle said. “This has been an incredibly long and painful journey, and today I want to give thanks, first and foremost, to Jesus, who has sustained me every step of the way.”
A full Employment Tribunal hearing is scheduled for April 2026 during which Melle will challenge how the Trust treated her case.
“I am thankful that this chapter is closing, but I remain determined that the lessons of my case, and the cases before mine, must be learned,” she said. “The NHS must protect its staff, uphold fairness, and ensure that no nurse is ever again placed in an impossible position for simply doing their job with integrity. Today I am thankful, relieved, and hopeful for what comes next. And I give glory to God for His faithfulness throughout this entire ordeal. I now look forward to the full employment tribunal in April.”










