Summary
Matilda Gwen Pomfret-Thomas was born on 29 October 2023 at Queen Alexandra Hospital following a difficult labour at home. Hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy had developed over a period of hours. Meconium had been observed, decelerations were later observed. On 15 November 2023 an investigation into the death of Matilda Gwen Pomfret-Thomas aged 15 days commenced. The investigation concluded at the end of the inquest on 4 December 2025 and the medical cause of death was hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy.
The birth of the family’s first child had been traumatic and, for the birth of their second child, Matilda, they were focussed on achieving a different birth experience and elected to use a doula to provide them with support at a home birth. The hospital’s preference was for a hospital delivery, there was discussion as to what circumstances would result in the mother being blue lighted to hospital. Signs of fetal distress developed but the mother was not immediately transferred to hospital. A difficult atmosphere had developed, the midwives felt access was being restricted by the doula: the coroner found that she did not actively discourage midwife access but that she was seen as, in effect, a buffer by members of the midwifery team. The doula was following the birth plan. The doula was supporting the parents per the birth plan, and this appears to have been perceived as grounds for hope that a home birth was still possible.
Content
Matters of concern
- Doulas provide continuity of care and give emotional, informational and practical support throughout pregnancy, labour and after the birth of a baby: those words come from Doula UK’s website. Doula UK is the largest representative body for Doulas, but it is not a regulatory body, it does not represent all doulas, indeed many doulas are not members of Doula UK. Doula UK have put in place membership requirements, training offers and much guidance, but the role of a doula is clearly diffuse in practical terms and capable of multiple understandings not just by doulas but their clients and midwives.
- It appears that doulas have been increasingly used and increasingly offer services – as here – on a paid basis.
- As MNSI (Maternity & Newborn Safety Investigations – formerly HSIB) put it in their report into this birth, “MNSI acknowledges that there is no regulation of doula care or any guidance on how the two services interact with each other. MNSI considers the dynamics of a situation, where a third party are involved can provide additional challenges for staff, such as making clinical recommendations against personal recommendations or views and providing usual care that could be viewed as interference rather than surveillance.”
- MNSI have identified 12 cases in which there was evidence that doulas worked outside of the defined boundaries of their role and in which the care or advice provided by the doula was considered to have potentially had an influence on the poor outcome for the family.
- There was evidence given at the inquest by experienced midwifery professionals highlighting that provision of guidance would be helpful for all involved with a birth at which a doula was present.
- The issues of doula registration, regulation and training are therefore points of concern the coroner would commend for review.
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