20/03/2008

No Room At The Ward For Expectant Mums

New figures show that more women in labour than ever before have been turned away from maternity wards last year because they were full.

More than 40% of the 103 trusts that provided data to a survey said that they had to refuse the women or divert them to other sites.

The figures were obtained by the Conservative Party in a freedom of information request.

The Tories said that of the Trusts that had to turn women away, 74 % had more than 3,000 births last year, suggesting larger maternity units were at higher risk of closing.

One of the biggest maternity providers in England, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust reported 28 closures.

Shadow Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: "The Government's plans to close maternity units when services are already overstretched fly in the face of common sense.

"Labour are fixated with cutting smaller, local maternity services and concentrating them in big units.

"But women don't want to travel miles to give birth."

A Department of Health spokesman said directing women to other hospitals should be the exception rather than the rule.

"It is difficult to precisely predict when a mother will go into labour and sometimes, at the times of peak demand maternity units do temporarily divert women to nearby facilities," he said.

A spokesperson for the National Childbirth Trust said: "It is a major cause of anxiety to telephone, or even arrive at a maternity unit, when in labour to find the doors are shut.

"Unscheduled closures should only occur in very exceptional circumstances when to keep a unit open would be unsafe."

(DS)


Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

06 June 2006
Overweight mothers pose health risk, study claims
Overweight and obese mums-to-be are risking the health of themselves and their unborn children, as well as putting additional strain on the health service, research has suggested. Researchers at Teesside University carried out a study into maternal obesity and pregnancy outcome.
29 September 2006
Working mums receive maternity pay boost
Hundreds of thousands of working mothers will receive an increase in paid maternity leave, as the first changes under the Work and Families Act are introduced.
10 March 2005
Mothers 'cannot afford' full maternity leave
New mothers are being forced to return to work early because they can't afford to take their full statutory maternity leave, a leading trading union has claimed.
12 September 2003
Midwife shortage is contributing to near misses in wards
Midwife shortages are contributing to “adverse events and near misses" on UK labour wards, according to a report published in this week's British Medical Journal. As part of the study, researchers examined practices in the labour wards of seven maternity units in the north west of England.
27 November 2007
Concerns Raised In Maternity Care Report
A survey into NHS maternity services in England has revealed large variations in care in trusts across the country. The survey of 26,000 women, carried out by the Healthcare Commission, found that more than a quarter of women reported being left alone during labour or shortly after giving birth, at a time that worried them.