
Princess Beatrice made her return to UK charitable duties on Monday afternoon, touring medical research facilities at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in her capacity as patron of Borne.The royal’s appearance at the laboratories dedicated to preventing premature births represented her first domestic charity engagement since her father lost his royal status and ducal title.Andrew Mountbatten Windsor faced removal of his princely title and Duke of York designation due to his connections with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.The princess’s London appearance followed reports of her participation at an investment gathering in Saudi Arabia the previous week, where she organised a tea reception.Princess Beatrice returns to public life with hospital visit as she recalls ‘Athena’s early arrival’ | PAHer visit to the hospital held particular significance, as she gave birth to her second child at the same facility earlier this year.The hospital visit carried deep personal meaning for the princess, whose daughter Athena Mapelli Mozzi arrived several weeks early in January, weighing just four pounds and five ounces.In written reflections about the experience, Beatrice revealed that her newborn was “so tiny it took more than a few weeks for the tears of relief to dry”.The princess assumed the role of Borne patron following Athena’s premature arrival, connecting her directly to the charity’s mission of understanding and preventing early births.Princess Beatrice’s daughter was born in January 2025 | PADuring Monday’s laboratory tour, she said: “The work that Borne is undertaking is something that is incredibly close and personal to me following the early arrival of my second daughter.“Today’s visit was not only insightful but has given me so much hope for pregnant mothers in the UK that this topic is being taken incredibly seriously.“As a patron of Borne, I am so grateful for the scientists and clinicians who took the time today to show me the advances they are making to reduce the risks to expectant mums and babies.”The charity focuses on investigating why infants arrive prematurely and developing methods to prevent such occurrences, addressing a medical challenge that affects thousands of British families annually.Princess Beatrice has not attended any UK engagements since her father’s public downfall | PATelevision weather forecaster Laura Tobin accompanied the princess during the facility tour, bringing her own perspective as mother to Charlotte, who weighed merely two pounds and eight ounces when born three months early in 2017.The visitors observed researchers examining triggers of early labour, inflammatory processes during pregnancy, and potential therapeutic interventions to extend gestation periods.Ms Tobin characterised the laboratory tour as “deeply personal”, noting how the scientific advances offered genuine optimism that “one day fewer families will have to face what ours did.”Monday’s laboratory visit forms part of Borne’s “every week counts” initiative ahead of World Prematurity Day on 17 November.The princess and Borne founder Professor Mark Johnson will convene an event at Battersea Power Station to unite researchers, supporters and affected families | PAThe princess and Borne founder Professor Mark Johnson will convene an event at Battersea Power Station to unite researchers, supporters and affected families.Approximately 60,000 infants arrive prematurely across Britain annually, representing one in 13 deliveries, whilst globally 15 million babies are born early.Despite prematurity complications being the primary cause of newborn mortality and permanent disabilities, under two per cent of medical research funding addresses pregnancy and childbirth issues.Whilst Andrew faces relocation from Windsor’s Royal Lodge to Sandringham following his loss of royal status, his daughters maintain their princess titles.Parliamentary discussion of Andrew’s circumstances may occur this week, with Liberal Democrats planning to examine his property arrangements when MPs reconvene on Tuesday.