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Baby died after hospital failings starved her of oxygen at birth

A baby suffered brain damage and died due to failings at a hospital where her mother spent hours alone in pain and suffered crucial delays, according to her family.

Dominic and Ewelina Clyde-Smith told The Independent their daughter, Amelia, was otherwise healthy and poor care led to her being starved of oxygen at birth.

The couple said they experienced a series of failings at Jersey General Hospital in 2018, including a lack of a doctor during a difficult labour and staff taking “too long” to resuscitate their child.

They believe Amelia suffered further harm when a ventilator was not plugged in properly during a transfer.

Amelia was left with brain damage and died aged one month after being put into palliative care.

Her parents said they have spent years trying to get justice through official channels but are now speaking out for the first time as they believe the standard of care received should be public knowledge.

“It happened nearly four years ago,” Ms Clyde-Smith says, adding: “But the whole maternity unit just failed us completely.”

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Source: BBC News, 1 July 2022

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Baby died after deadly bowel condition was mistaken for cow’s milk allergy

A two-month-old baby died after doctors mistook symptoms of a suspected perforated bowel for a cow’s milk intolerance.

Nailah Ally was diagnosed with a hole in the heart before she was born and necrotising enterocolitis (NEC) shortly after her birth in October 2019.

Nailah died from multiple organ failure after she was sent home from hospital and went into septic shock

A consultant believed Nailah might have an intolerance to cow’s milk and changed the formula she was being fed.

A spokesman for the family said: “Nailah’s case not only vividly highlights the dangers of sepsis, but the potential consequences of poor communication between doctors as well as between doctors and families.”

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Source: The Telegraph, 7 March 2023

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Baby died after being half-delivered during ‘chaotic’ birth at NHS trust

A baby boy was starved of oxygen and died after being left half-delivered for almost a quarter of an hour during a “chaotic” breech birth in an NHS maternity unit.

Midwives failed to recognise baby Theo Ellis was in the breech, or bottom first, position until his mother Laura Ellis, 34, was already in advanced labour at Surrey’s Frimley Park Hospital.

What followed was a catalogue of errors by midwives and doctors who failed to heed the emergency situation and raised the alarm too late.

At one stage a paediatrician was made to stand outside the room by midwives while junior staff struggled to deliver Theo alone. A senior obstetrician was in surgery and a miscommunication by midwives and an on-call consultant meant she did not arrive until Theo was already dead.

After his parents brought legal action against the NHS, Frimley Park Hospital has now admitted mistakes led to Theo’s death in April 2019.

Ms Ellis and husband James are angry their son was classed as being stillborn which meant a coroner was not allowed to investigate his care during an inquest. There have been repeated calls to change the law to ensure the deaths of babies like Theo are investigated.

His mother told The Independent: “I walked in with a healthy baby. I’d looked after him for nine months and they killed him in the process of giving birth. The hospital get to write that he was stillborn, which obviously is a huge benefit to them, because the coroner can’t get involved, which to me is just staggering."

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Source: The Independent, 9 March 2021

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Baby died after “red flag” signs of bowel obstruction were missed in phone consultation, inquest hears

An inquest into the death of a baby after an advanced neonatal nurse practitioner missed “red flag” signs of a bowel obstruction during a phone consultation has again cast the issue of safe remote care into the spotlight.

Jax Miller died at 1 day old of volvulus, which occurs when a loop of intestine twists around itself and causes a bowel obstruction. It is known to be a critical medical emergency.

A number of doctors have expressed concern about the case on social media, particularly about the lack of a face-to-face consultation and the wider issue of non-medical professionals taking on roles traditionally held by doctors.

Jax was born on 7 June 2023 at the Princess Royal Hospital in Sussex and discharged home after a normal newborn and infant physical exam. Only one feed had been recorded before discharge, and Jax’s mother had been concerned about his reluctance to feed. She had also reported that Jax had vomited several times, which was not further investigated.

After discharge Jax remained reluctant to feed and continued to vomit. The mother was not advised to attend hospital immediately and was reassured that all was fine.

The next morning Jax’s mother took him to the Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital in Brighton, where doctors carried out a laparotomy for suspected volvulus. The surgeon found a 360° malrotation with a completely dead small bowel and concluded that his condition was incompatible with life. Jax was redirected to a palliative pathway and died that evening.

At the inquest on 1 October the coroner concluded that Jax had died from natural causes, but he said, “There was a missed opportunity to provide the baby with urgent medical care due to an omission in communicating to his mother the appropriate actions to be taken should his condition become acute.” However, the coroner did not conclude that a prevention of future deaths report was necessary or appropriate.

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Source: BMJ, 14 October 2025

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Baby deaths trust still has care problems

An investigation into the high number of baby deaths at a Shropshire NHS trust in 2022 has identified poor care and issues with the neonatal service.

The Royal College of Physicians' review states further investigation is needed into high mortality across the entire West Midlands region, as well as at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital (SaTH) NHS trust.

On seven baby deaths, the report about the "obstetric journey" describes as poor the way problems were dealt with.

SaTH has insisted the quality of treatment had not contributed to deaths, but apologised for examples of poor care.

A total of 18 deaths were recorded by SaTH in the year 2021-22, which was 5% higher than similar sized trusts.

For the three years before this, neonatal mortality had also been high. So the trust invited the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) to look at its neonatal service.

The period 2021-22 was the time when senior midwife Donna Ockenden was reporting on SaTH failures that led to 200 deaths – at that stage the biggest maternity scandal in NHS history.

The RCP said the overall impression was of a maternity service that had taken huge strides over the past two years.

However, The RCP report identified only five cases where there was good practice in 2022. Two were unsatisfactory and 10 had room for improvement.

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Source: BBC News, 12 November 2024

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Baby deaths trust claimed £2m 'good care' payments

An NHS trust criticised over the avoidable death of a newborn baby was paid £2m for providing good maternity care, the BBC can reveal.

A senior coroner ruled on Friday that University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay (UHMB) NHS trust contributed to Ida Lock's death and had failed to learn lessons from previous maternity failures.

Despite this, the trust claimed it had met all 10 standards under an NHS scheme aimed at promoting safe treatment.

Ida's mother Sarah Robinson said it was "another kick in the teeth" while her father Ryan Lock labelled it "disgusting". The trust, which has previously apologised for its failings in Ida's care, declined to comment about the NHS payment scheme.

Senior coroner for Lancashire James Adeley concluded that Ida had died due to the gross failure of three midwives to provide basic medical care.

Ida, who was born at the Royal Lancaster Infirmary (RLI) on 9 November 2019, died a week later after suffering a serious brain injury due to a lack of oxygen.

Dr Adeley ruled her death had been caused by the midwives' failure to deliver the infant "urgently when it was apparent she was in distress" and contributed to by the lead midwife's "wholly incompetent failure to provide basic neonatal resuscitation".

He said eight opportunities had been missed "to alter Ida's clinical course".

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Source: BBC News, 26 March 2025

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Baby deaths inquiry: Shrewsbury NHS trust condemned for ‘repeated failures’

A damning report into hundreds of baby deaths has condemned the trust at the centre of the biggest maternity scandal in the history of the NHS for blaming mothers while repeatedly ignoring its own catastrophic blunders for decades.

The independent inquiry into maternity practices at Shrewsbury and Telford hospital NHS trust uncovered hundreds of cases in which health officials failed to undertake serious incident investigations, while deaths were dismissed or not investigated appropriately. Instead, grieving families were denied access to reviews of their care and mothers were blamed when their babies died or suffered horrific injuries.

A combination of an obsession with natural births over caesarean sections coupled with a shocking lack of staff, training and oversight of maternity wards resulted in a toxic culture in which mothers and babies died needlessly for 20 years while “repeated failures” were ignored again and again.

Tragically, it meant some babies were stillborn, dying shortly after birth or being left severely brain damaged, while others suffered horrendous skull fractures or avoidable broken bones. Some babies developed cerebral palsy after traumatic forceps deliveries, while others were starved of oxygen and experienced life-changing brain injuries.

The report, led by the maternity expert Donna Ockenden, examined cases involving 1,486 families between 2000 and 2019, and reviewed 1,592 clinical incidents.

“Throughout our final report we have highlighted how failures in care were repeated from one incident to the next,” she said. “For example, ineffective monitoring of foetal growth and a culture of reluctance to perform caesarean sections resulted in many babies dying during birth or shortly after their birth.

“In many cases, mother and babies were left with lifelong conditions as a result of their care and treatment. The reasons for these failures are clear. There were not enough staff, there was a lack of ongoing training, there was a lack of effective investigation and governance at the trust and a culture of not listening to the families involved.

“There was a tendency of the trust to blame mothers for their poor outcomes, in some cases even for their own deaths. What is astounding is that for more than two decades these issues have not been challenged internally and the trust was not held to account by external bodies.

“This highlights that systemic change is needed locally, and nationally, to ensure that care provided to families is always professional and compassionate, and that teams from ward to board are aware of and accountable for the values and standards that they should be upholding. Going forward, there can be no excuses.”

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Source: The Guardian, 30 March 2022

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Baby deaths force end to NHS targets for natural births

The NHS has abandoned targets that encouraged hospitals to pursue “normal births”, over fears for the safety of mothers and babies.

Maternity units were told in a letter to stop using caesarean section rates to assess their performance. It comes after repeated scandals in maternity units, blamed in part on a focus on pursuing natural births at the expense of safety.

The letter from Jacqueline Dunkley-Bent, NHS England’s chief midwife, and Dr Matthew Jolly, the national clinical director for maternity, instructed “all maternity services to stop using total caesarean section rates as a means of performance management”.

It added: “We are concerned by the potential for services to pursue targets that may be clinically inappropriate and unsafe in individual cases."

A final report into the deaths of dozens of babies at the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust will be published next month. It is expected to be highly critical.

The midwife leading the inquiry, Donna Ockenden, has said women “felt pressured to have a normal birth” at the trust, adding: “There was a multi-professional, not midwife-led, focus on normal birth pretty much at any cost.”

Hayley Coates, 29, lost her son Kaylan after staff at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust ignored her pleas for a caesarean section in March 2018. A coroner ruled that neglect contributed to Kaylan’s death. He suffered a fractured skull when he was delivered with forceps and was starved of oxygen.

Coates, a mother of three, said she welcomed the NHS England letter, adding: “I was just ignored when I asked multiple times for a caesarean section. I was told repeatedly: ‘You will have this baby naturally, you don’t want to go to theatre.’ If I had gone to theatre many hours before, my baby wouldn’t have died. They have a duty of care, and the mother’s wishes are supposed to be priority.”

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Source: The Times, 20 February 2022

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Baby death raises questions over maternity care

Beth and Dan Wankiewicz want answers about why their baby son Clay died last year, shortly after his birth at Doncaster Royal Infirmary. Despite a low-risk pregnancy, the family say Clay died from multiple skull fractures.

Doncaster and Bassetlaw NHS Foundation Trust said "the provision and delivery of high-quality" care is a priority.

The BBC has found a 2016 review flagging concerns about the hospital's maternity care was never published. The report - one of scores of unpublished reports discovered by a Freedom of Information request by BBC's Panorama programme - highlighted significant patient safety concerns.

Beth Wankiewicz was admitted to hospital last July, but after a day of labour her baby had still not been born. With no consultant doctor on site, a junior doctor made two attempts to deliver the baby with forceps, after getting advice on the phone.

Father, Dan, remembers the second attempt with forceps being much more vigorous "which was a bit of a shock".

The family say there was a further delay before they had a Caesarean section. Their baby had to be pushed back up the birth canal into the womb for the C-section to be performed.

"I think after about 10 minutes, we both looked at the clock, and we said it's not looking good," said Dan.

Around 20 minutes after their son was born, despite attempts to resuscitate him, they were told he had died.

The following day they say a midwife told them she was being pressurised by other staff to say Clay had been stillborn, but she was sure he had been born alive, and she had heard a heartbeat.

The family now believe this was to avoid scrutiny and the need for a coroner's inquest, which doesn't happen with still births.

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Source: BBC News, 19 May 2021

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Baby death prompts new maternity concerns at Morecambe Bay hospital trust

A hospital that was at the centre of a major inquiry into unsafe maternity care five years ago is facing new questions over its safety after bosses admitted a baby boy would have survived if not for mistakes by hospital staff.

Jenny Feasey, from Heysham in Lancashire, is still coming to terms with the loss of her son Toby who was stillborn at the Royal Lancaster Infirmary, part of the University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay Foundation Trust in January 2017 after a series of mistakes by staff who did not act on signs she had pre-eclampsia.

Jenny, 33, has backed The Independent’s campaign for improved maternity safety and called on midwives to learn lessons after what happened to her family.

She added: “This was an easily avoidable situation. They just didn’t piece it together, all they had to do was carry out a test and I lost my son because of it."

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Source: The Independent, 25 October 2020

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Baby death NHS trust reaches 'turning point'

Two maternity units in Kent have shown signs of improvements three years after a damning independent review found up to 45 babies might have survived if they had received better care, a report has said.

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) report rated maternity services at William Harvey Hospital in Ashford and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital in Margate as good, two years after they were downgraded to inadequate.

The CQC said "significant improvements" had been made at both units to safety, leadership, culture, the environment and staffing levels.

Tracey Fletcher, chief executive of East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust, said the report was "an important milestone in our continuing work to improve our services".

Serena Coleman, CQC's deputy director of operations in Kent, said: "We found significant improvements and a better quality service for women, people using the service and their babies.

"This turnaround in ratings across both services demonstrates what can be achieved with strong and capable leaders who focus on an inclusive and positive culture."

Kaye Wilson, chief midwife for the South East at NHS England, said: "This report marks a turning point for services at East Kent and is the result of the commitment, determination and sheer hard work of midwives, obstetricians and the whole maternity team."

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Source: BBC News,15 May 2025

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Baby death mother 'was not seen by obstetrician'

A woman whose baby died after sustaining severe brain damage during labour was not seen by an obstetrician during her pregnancy, an inquest heard. It meant his mother Eileen McCarthy was unable to discuss her birthing options.

Walter German was starved of oxygen during a long labour at the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton.

Lawyers at Fieldfisher are pursuing a civil negligence case, claiming a C-section should have been offered due to a previous third-degree tear.

Walter was born in December 2020. His life-support was turned off after nine days, as his injuries were unrecoverable.

Recording a narrative verdict, coroner Sarah Clarke said Walter died as a result of his brain being starved of oxygen, likely due in part to an umbilical cord obstruction.

She said: "Walter's mother was not seen by an obstetrician during her pregnancy and this led to her being unable to discuss birth options regarding delivery given her previous third degree tear.

"Walter's mother was in the advanced stages of labour for a prolonged period of time with an indication for an earlier obstetric review being apparent."

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Source: BBC News, 4 May 2022

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Baby death inquiry delayed by leadership confusion

Investigations into serious maternity safety concerns have been delayed by at least six months because national agencies could not decide who should lead the work, HSJ has learned.

Gloucestershire Hospitals Foundation Trust announced in May it would commission reviews of mortality linked to maternity and neonatal services. This followed a BBC Panorama documentary in January, which claimed cultural and staffing problems had caused avoidable baby deaths.

But, six months on, the review of maternity services has still not started, and the neonatal review did not begin until recent weeks – and is not due to complete until late this year, nearly 12 months after the BBC programme.

The trust said it was still working with NHS England to appoint an “external assessor” for the maternity review, while an NHSE regional team has now begun examining the neonatal deaths.

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Source: HSJ, 5 November 2024

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Baby death inquiries are poor and incomplete, experts say

Deaths of newborn babies should be more thoroughly investigated by health boards in Scotland, experts have said after reviewing an increase in infant mortality.

The team found inquiries into baby deaths conducted by health boards were “poor quality, inconsistent and incomplete”.

The experts added that information about staffing levels on maternity wards at the time of the deaths was so poor that they could not draw any conclusions.

They were also unable to determine if health boards enlisted independent, external advisers when considering if deaths could have been prevented.

Helen Mactier, a retired neonatologist and chairwoman of the Neonatal Mortality Review, said: “This review has helped to get a clearer understanding of the increase in neonatal deaths that occurred in 2021-22.

“We understand that there are still unanswered questions, and our recommendations are focused on ensuring that future opportunities to learn are not missed and acted on in a timely and comprehensive manner.”

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Source: The Times, 27 February 2024

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Baby boy died from sepsis after doctors’ delay giving antibiotics

A three-month-old boy died from sepsis after ‘gross failures’ by medics to give him antibiotics until it was too late, an inquest ruled. Lewys Crawford died a day after he was admitted to the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff with a high temperature last March. Jurors at Pontypridd Coroner’s Court said the failure of doctors to treat his illness with antibiotics until seven hours after his arrival had ‘significantly contributed’ to his death. They found the little boy died from natural causes contributed to by neglect in his care.

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Source: The Metro, 15 February 2020

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Baby boomers living longer but are in worse health than previous generations

Baby boomers are living longer but are in worse health than previous generations were at the same age, despite advances in medicine and greater awareness of healthy lifestyles, a global study shows.

Researchers found people in their 50s and 60s were more likely to have serious health problems than people who were born before or during the second world war when they reached that age.

The results cannot be explained by people living longer, experts at the University of Oxford and University College London (UCL) said. Obesity, type 2 diabetes, cancer, heart disease and other diseases were all affecting people at younger ages.

Rates of illness and disability increased across successive generations during the last century, according to the findings published in the Journals of Gerontology.

The lead author, Laura Gimeno, of UCL, said there was a “generational health drift”, with younger generations tending to have worse health than previous generations at the same age.

“Even with advances in medicine and greater public awareness about healthy living, people born since 1945 are at greater risk of chronic illness and disability than their predecessors.

“With up to a fifth of the population in high-income western nations now over 65, increasing demands for health and social care will have huge implications on government spending.”

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Source: The Guardian, 7 October 2024

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Babies with rare muscle-wasting disease living longer thanks to treatment advances

Almost three-quarters of babies born with a rare muscle-wasting disease are living longer thanks to advances in NHS treatment.

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a genetic condition that causes muscle weakness, along with progressive loss of movement and paralysis.

There are three types of this disease that impact children. SMA1 manifests in babies under the age of six months and is the most severe, while SMA2 and SMA3 are less severe. They develop between the ages of seven and 18 months, and after 18 months of age, respectively. According to the NHS, about 70 babies are born in the UK with SMA each year.

The NHS began rolling out new treatments in 2019, starting with injectable drug nurinersen – marketed as Spinraza – which targets the SMN2 gene in patients. Before 2019 there were no effective drugs for this condition.

A study by SMA Reach UK claims patients with untreated SMA1 historically had a 50% survival probability at eight to 10 months, reducing to 8% at 20 months of age. However, data from the SMA Reach UK database analysed by NHS England found 73% of babies with SMA1 are now living beyond two years and without permanent ventilatory support.

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Source: Independent, 7 August 2023

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Babies dying from treatable infections because of avoidable NHS errors, warns safety watchdog

Babies are at risk of dying from common treatable infections because NHS staff on maternity wards are not following national guidance and are short-staffed and overworked, an investigation has revealed.

The Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB), a national safety watchdog, has warned that NHS staff on maternity wards face sometimes conflicting advice on treating women who are positive for a group B streptococcus (GBS) infection.

They are also making errors in women’s care because of the pressure of work and a lack of staff, with antibiotics not being administered when they should be.

HSIB’s specialist investigators examined 39 safety incidents in which GSB had been identified, and found that the infection had contributed to six baby deaths, six stillbirths and three cases of babies being left with severe brain damage.

In its report, the watchdog warned that the problems on maternity wards meant that even in cases where mothers were known to be positive for GBS infection, this wasn’t shared with the mother or noted in the record, resulting in the standard care and antibiotics not being provided.

It added: “The identification and escalation of care for babies who show signs of GBS infection after birth was missed. This has resulted in severe brain injury and death for some of the affected babies.”

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Source: The Independent, 19 July 2020

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Babies died after hospital neglect - inquest jury

Two premature babies died within weeks of each other after neglect by a hospital, an inquest jury has found.

Westminster Coroners’ Court heard Elena Ali and Sunny Parker-Propst were both given sodium nitrite instead of sodium bicarbonate in 2020 while under the care of staff at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital.

On Monday they returned verdicts of unlawful killing contributed to by neglect for baby Sunny, and accidental death contributed to by neglect for baby Elena.

Lesley Watts, chief executive of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, said: “We apologise unreservedly for the failings in care provided to Elena and Sunny."

Ms Watts added: “We took immediate action to put measures in place to prevent such tragic incidents from happening again.”

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Source: BBC News, 22 July 2024

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Babies born very premature can have brain development disrupted in intensive care unit, review finds

While most babies born more than two months prematurely now survive thanks to medical advances, little progress has been made in the past two decades in preventing associated developmental problems, an expert review has found.

The review also found that very preterm babies can have their brain development disrupted by environmental factors in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), including nutrition, pain, stress and parenting behaviours.

A review conducted by experts from the Children’s Hospital of Orange County in the US and the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health at Monash University in Australia found that while these neurodevelopmental problems can be related to brain injury during gestation or due to cardiac and respiratory issues in the first week of life, the environment of the NICU is also critical.

To improve outcomes for very preterm babies, the review recommended family based interventions that reduce parental stress during gestation, more research into rehabilitation in intensive care and in the early months of life, and greater understanding of the role of environment and parenting after birth.

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Source: The Guardian, 3 August 2023

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Babies born to black mothers 81% more likely to die in neonatal care, NHS study shows

Babies born to black mothers in England and Wales and those from the most deprived areas are significantly more likely to die while in neonatal units, according to analysis revealing the “deeply concerning” figures.

The study, led by academics at the University of Liverpool, examined data on more than 700,000 babies admitted to an NHS neonatal unit across England and Wales between 2012 and 2022.

Babies born to black mothers had the highest mortality rates for the majority of years in the study, with an 81% higher risk of dying before discharge compared with babies born to white mothers.

The highest mortality rate for black babies stood at 29.7 deaths per 1,000 babies, with the highest rate for white babies at 16.9 deaths per 1,000 babies.

For babies born to mothers living in the most deprived areas of England and Wales, the elevated risk stood at 63% compared with the least deprived babies.

The highest mortality rate for babies born to the most deprived mothers was 25.9 deaths per 1,000 babies in 2022, compared with 12.8 deaths per 1,000 for their least deprived counterparts.

Samira Saberian, a PhD student at the University of Liverpool and the lead author of the study, said the analysis showed that “socioeconomic and ethnic inequalities independently shape survival in neonatal units, and maternal and birth factors explain only over half of the socioeconomic and ethnic inequalities”.

She added: “To reduce these inequalities, we need integrated approaches that strengthen clinical care while also tackling the wider conditions affecting families.

“By improving services and addressing the root drivers of inequality, we can give the most vulnerable babies a better chance of survival.”

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Source: The Guardian, 4 November 2025

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Babies at risk’ as NHS faces losing nearly one in 10 midwives over mandatory jabs

The NHS could be forced to dismiss almost 2,000 midwives by the government’s mandatory vaccination policy, amid warnings from a former chief nurse of England that mothers and babies will be put at risk.

Well-placed senior sources have told HSJ around 1,700 midwives remain unvaccinated nationally, according to the latest data from trusts.

Based on official headcount data that would amount to between 6.5-8% of the workforce, depending on whether it counts full time equivalent or total staff numbers.

However, they are mostly in London, with the latest estimate in the city said to be about 680 (representing between 12 and 14% of the workforce), several well placed sources told HSJ, meaning its maternity services could be seriously destabilised.

A former chief nurse of England, Sarah Mullally, who now sits in the House of Lords as the Bishop of London, said she believed about 12.5% of London’s midwives were unvaccinated, and called on the government to delay the mandatory health worker vaccination policy.

Speaking in Parliament yesterday, she warned mothers and babies would be put at risk, “in order to implement a policy that has been superseded by the evolution of the virus”.

She added: “I would strongly encourage everyone, including NHS staff and health care workers, to get fully vaccinated. However, having heard from midwives myself this week, I can see the anxiety that the requirement for mandatory vaccination is causing, as well as the potential risks to the heath service and its patients.

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Source: HSJ, 21 January 2022

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Babies are dying because of NHS failings, poverty and inequality, charities warn

Hundreds of babies are dying unnecessarily because overstretched maternity services are delivering substandard care and struggling to overcome entrenched poverty and racial inequalities, a report has warned.

The report by baby loss charities Sands and Tommy’s says the government’s aim to halve the number of stillbirths and neonatal deaths in England by 2025 is stalling, while there is no target in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.

Stillbirths are creeping up in England after falling in the past decade. Babies dying before and during delivery rose to just over four in every 1,000 births in 2021. Similarly, long-falling rates of neonatal deaths, where newborns die within the first four weeks of birth, are also rising. There were 1.4 deaths of newborn babies for every 1,000 births in 2021, compared with 1.3 in 2020.

Robert Wilson, head of the charities’ joint policy unit, said the government and NHS need to make fundamental changes. “The UK is not making enough progress to reduce rates of pregnancy loss and baby death, and there are worrying signs that these rates are now heading in the wrong direction,” he said.

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Source: The Guardian, 14 May 2023

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Ayrshire MSP Katy Clark wants ban on surgical mesh use in hernia ops

AN Ayrshire MSP has called for an end to surgical mesh being implanted in hernia patients in Scotland.

A Freedom of Information request by Labour's Katy Clark has revealed that one in 12 of all hernia patients in NHS Ayrshire and Arran who have been implanted with surgical mesh since 2015 have been readmitted to hospital due to complications.

And the West of Scotland MSP has backed a petition by constituents calling for the suspension of the use of surgical mesh until an independent review has been carried out.

It follows the recent public health scandal over the pain and suffering endured by many women across Scotland implanted with transvaginal mesh.

It took years of tireless campaigning by affected women before the Scottish Government took action, last year creating a mesh removal reimbursement scheme.

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Source: Irvine Times, 9 June 2023

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Avoidable baby deaths are 'a badge of shame' on the NHS as expert warns bereaved families have to report maternity blunders as watchdogs and hospitals are unable to spot failings

Bereaved families are having to report maternity blunders because watchdogs and hospitals are unable to spot failings, an expert has warned.

Bill Kirkup said avoidable deaths were "a badge of shame" but would continue without urgent change.

Eight years on from his report into the Morecambe Bay maternity scandal, he said the failure of officials to act had needlessly cost more lives.

"I am very disappointed – and surprised – that we're still where we are", he said. "That's a terrible badge of shame for the health service that it takes families to come and tell us what's wrong. 

"Yet just about every tragedy that I've ever been involved with investigating has come to light when there's a group of families who say 'You've got a problem here'.

"People are lying, they're not being open and they're concealing what's happening.

"If we can't bring this change, I'm not confident that there won't be another East Kent, Morecambe Bay or Nottingham, somewhere else."

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Source: Mail Online, 10 March 2023

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