H
society
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Women must be warned of home birth risks and have access to skilled midwives, experts say

about 18 hours ago
A picture


Women must be given clearer warnings on the potentially fatal dangers of giving birth at home and should only be aided by experienced midwives, experts have said.Maternity services worldwide are dealing with an increase in the number of women with more complex pregnancies.Many are choosing to have their baby in a familiar environment, in the comfort and privacy of their own home.Some choose a home birth because having their first baby in hospital was “deeply traumatic” and they are reluctant to repeat the experience.But access to safe, reliable and unrestricted home birth services is patchy, and varies enormously depending on where you live, experts say.

Healthcare services in lots of countries struggle to offer home birth services because of staffing shortages, inconsistent training or local policy limitations.Some have dedicated home birth teams, while others rely on overstretched community staff.The Guardian has spoken to leading doctors, academics and pregnancy experts about home births after a coroner’s court in Rochdale, England, ruled that a mother and daughter died following a home birth owing to “a gross failure to provide basic medical care”.Jennifer Cahill, 34, died at North Manchester general hospital hours after suffering a haemorrhage while giving birth at home in Prestwich on 3 June 2024.Her baby, Agnes Lily, was delivered not breathing, with the umbilical cord wrapped around her neck.

She died at the same hospital as her mother a few days later.Manchester university NHS foundation trust has apologised and accepted there were “serious failures” in the care given to Cahill and Agnes.In England and Wales, about one in 50 births take place at home.However, they are recommended only for low-risk pregnancies.Cahill’s pregnancy was considered high-risk because she had suffered a postpartum haemorrhage after giving birth to her first child in 2021.

Because of this, she was advised to have her second baby in hospital.But her husband, Rob, told the court the dangers of a home birth had not been fully explained.Phrases such as “out of guidance” were favoured, rather than “against medical advice”, and the risk of death was not explicitly raised, the inquest was told.Cahill’s husband said his wife opted for a home birth because she had not felt supported during her first delivery, which she had found “highly stressful”.But she was not properly advised on the benefits of having Agnes in hospital, and if she had been, it was likely that she would not have delivered her daughter at home, the court heard.

“This is an unbearably sad case of two avoidable deaths,” said Kim Thomas, chief executive of the Birth Trauma Association, one of the first charities in the world to support women and families who have experienced traumatic births,“We often hear from women who, having had a deeply traumatic first birth in hospital, are reluctant to give birth in hospital again,Some choose not to have another baby, while others opt for home birth,“Unfortunately, for women like Jennifer Cahill, who had experienced numerous complications in her previous birth, a home birth can be particularly risky,Several things seem to have gone wrong in this case.

It seems staff were reluctant to spell out the risks to Mrs Cahill, so she was not able to make a fully informed decision.”The inquest also heard both of the community midwives who attended Cahill’s home, for reasons the court could not ascertain, had not seen or been aware of a thorough birth plan devised by the Cahills before Jennifer went into labour.Both midwives had worked 12-hour shifts before delivering Agnes and had been awake for more than 30 hours by the time the delivery was over.Each tried their best to help Cahill but their effectiveness was affected by a “lack of understanding and confidence” in what she had wanted due to a failure in communication from others, the court heard.Vital notes, such as Cahill’s blood pressure readings and the baby’s heart rate, were not properly recorded, with the latter scrawled on a spare incontinence pad, which was later thrown away.

“The midwives had come straight to the birth from very long shifts, and seem to have lacked the expertise and the experience to handle a complex home birth,” said Thomas.“While we support the right of women to choose home birth, they do need to have the risks explained to them in full so that they can make an informed decision.“We also believe that it is unreasonable and unethical to expect midwives to attend a home birth after a 12-hour shift, when they must have felt exhausted.Only highly experienced midwives should be required to attend home births where the woman has been categorised as high-risk.”One of the two midwives at Cahill’s home for the birth said there had been an “unease in the office” about home birth requests.

Staff were “nervous about being on call” and some “would do anything to get out of being on call”, the court heard,Dr Shuby Puthussery, an associate professor in maternal and child health at the University of Bedfordshire, agreed with Thomas that only midwives with extensive experience and advanced skills should be asked to attend home births,“Home births should be supported by experienced midwives with enhanced midwifery skills who are formally assessed as competent and confident to provide care for women within the home birth environment,” she said,“While homes births promote women’s choice and are becoming increasingly popular, neither reckless promotions nor blanket bans are the way forward,She said it was “absolutely crucial” that health professionals engage in “open and transparent” discussions with women considering home births “about the potential for worse outcomes” if things go wrong during a home birth.

Women should also be made aware of the extra time it may take to be transferred to hospital in case of an emergency, she said,“The advice to women who have medical conditions or have had a previous complicated birth or are giving birth the first time, is to give birth in a hospital or health facility with immediate and direct access to specialist care,” Puthussery said,Prof Asma Khalil, a consultant obstetrician in London, England, and an internationally renowned expert in maternal and foetal medicine, said the evidence about the risks of home births was clear,“For healthy women with a low-risk pregnancy who have had an uncomplicated birth before, a home birth may be suitable when supported by a qualified midwifery team,However, evidence shows that home birth carries higher risks for babies, particularly for first-time mothers or those with high-risk pregnancies.

”It is important that women understand the possibility of complications arising during labour, and that any delay in accessing urgent medical support could put them or their baby at risk, Khalil added.“Events can occur during labour in which rapid access to medical care is critical, such as when a baby becomes stuck on the pelvic bone, uterine rupture, haemorrhage or umbilical cord problems.”In Cahill’s case, she suffered a haemorrhage and lost five pints of blood – almost half the blood in her body.She went into cardiac arrest while in the ambulance on the way to the hospital, and later died from multiple organ failure.Khalil, the vice-president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, said the latest data did not indicate an increase in home births and that they tended to represent a small percentage of births that take place.

However, maternity services were experiencing “an increase in women presenting with more complex pregnancies” that required more care and time with midwives, she said.To ensure every woman received the high quality personalised service she needed and deserved, governments “must ensure there are sufficient midwives and obstetricians to provide this care”, she added.Khalil said she was also seeing shifts in how women were giving birth, including an increasing number of caesarean births and inductions.Governments needed to support maternity services “to adapt and ensure they have the right staffing, training and facilities to manage increasingly complex births”, she added.“This is vital to ensuring all babies and women receive safe, personalised and compassionate care.

”Katherine Walker, service development manager at the National Childbirth Trust, a UK charity that supports parents through pregnancy, said everyone had the right to decide where to give birth.Home births can be a safe option for pregnant women with a low risk of complications, she said.“Those experiencing a high-risk pregnancy may also choose to birth at home, although there are specific situations when this would not be recommended.The decision should be informed, supported, and respected.”Even for low-risk pregnancies, it is important that women discuss hospital transfer plans in advance and understand they can change their place of birth at any time before or during labour, Walker said.

There is also a postcode lottery in accessing safe services, she said.“Many families face unreliable or restricted home birth services due to staffing shortages, inconsistent training, or local policy limitations.” Some healthcare services have dedicated home birth teams, while others “rely on overstretched community midwifery services”, she said.“Pregnant women need a maternity system that provides safe, personalised, and culturally competent care in every setting,” she added.“This means investing in midwives and upholding every woman’s right to make informed choices about where and how they give birth.

”
politicsSee all
A picture

Nige is no longer laughing at himself as he ‘performs’ yet another big speech | John Crace

The scene: an old banking hall in the heart of the City. The music: first, Richard Clayderman plays Bach. Then Pachelbel’s Canon, followed by the Adagio from Mahler’s 5th. Death in Venice, Live in London. Not the usual venue or playlist for a Reform press conference

1 day ago
A picture

UK politics: MPs spar over response to Cambridgeshire train attack – as it happened

Max Wilkinson, the Lib Dem home affairs spokesperson, said within hours of this attack happening, social media was full of speculation about this attack, inciting racist and Islamphobic reaction.He accuses “figures on the hard right, including members of the Reform party” of trying to “exploit the incident for political gain”.Desperate to involve themselves in the tragedy, they reached for their dog whistles. They threw around baseless opinions on levels of crime when facts were available. They were shamelessly trying to turn tragedy into yet another excuse to whip up fear and sow division

1 day ago
A picture

What would UK economic policy look like under Nigel Farage’s Reform?

Nigel Farage has delivered a speech on his economic priorities. While it did not announce any new policies as such, it marked the most detailed explanation yet of what a Reform UK government might prioritise. Below are six areas he discussed.As recently as the buildup to May’s local elections, Reform was pledging to raise the threshold at which people start paying income tax from £12,570 to £20,000, bringing many thousands out of tax but costing the exchequer more than £40bn a year.Amid increasing scrutiny about how or if this could be paid for, Farage has rolled back

1 day ago
A picture

Nigel Farage backtracks on Reform UK’s promise to cut £90bn of taxes

Nigel Farage has rowed back from his party’s election promise to cut £90bn of taxes, accusing Labour and the Tories of “wrecking the public finances” and saying Reform UK would need to get public spending under control first.The Reform leader rejected suggestions he had been forced to break manifesto promises in order to gain economic credibility, suggesting the proposal had only ever been an “aspiration”.As well as backtracking on the party’s 2024 pledge to raise tax-free thresholds to £20,000, he refused to guarantee that the pensions triple lock – estimated to reach £15.5bn by 2030 – would remain under a Reform government.Farage’s speech in the City of London laid bare the tensions at the heart of his project, as he attempts to improve his party’s economic credibility, which political opponents regard as a weak point, while at the same time retain the electoral benefits of political insurgency

1 day ago
A picture

Nigel Farage to promise business deregulation in economic policy speech

Nigel Farage will promise a bonfire of business regulation as he spells out his party’s economic policies in more detail than ever in an attempt to bolster its reputation for fiscal credibility.The Reform leader will give a speech in London putting deregulation at the heart of his economic agenda, while also dropping a commitment made at the last election to deliver £90bn of tax cuts.The message is designed to bolster his party’s reputation for fiscal credibility after experts warned that his promises to cut £350bn from government spending over the next parliament did not add up.Farage will say: “When it comes to Brexit … we have not taken advantage of the opportunities to deregulate and become more competitive. The harsh truth is that regulations and regulators, in many areas, are worse than they were back in 2016

2 days ago
A picture

Tory patience wears thin as Badenoch’s critics count down to May elections

At an opulent speakeasy-style event at the Raffles hotel on Whitehall this week, the great and the good of what is left of the Conservative party marked the Spectator’s parliamentarian of the year awards.With the magazine’s editorial line still just about backing the Tories, despite the party facing an existential crisis from Reform UK, it was unsurprising that much of the gossip at the champagne-fuelled event was about whether Kemi Badenoch’s job was at risk.James Cleverly, who unsuccessfully ran against her for the leadership, couldn’t resist a dig from the stage at the naked ambition of his shadow cabinet colleague, Robert Jenrick – who is Badenoch’s biggest threat.“Am I after her job? Am I going to stick the knife between her shoulder blades and steal the crown? No, of course I’m not,” the veteran Tory cabinet minister told the laughing audience as he opened the awards ceremony.“You know that I’m not

3 days ago
trendingSee all
A picture

Pound hits lowest since April as investors anticipate budget tax rises; markets hit by AI valuation jitters – as it happened

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Gopichand Hinduja, head of Britain’s richest family, dies aged 85

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Experts find flaws in hundreds of tests that check AI safety and effectiveness

about 24 hours ago
A picture

OpenAI signs $38bn cloud computing deal with Amazon

1 day ago
A picture

WTA Finals tennis: Sabalenka fends off Pegula; Gauff beats ailing Paolini – as it happened

about 6 hours ago
A picture

NFL trade deadline: Colts land All-Pro corner Gardner from Jets in stunner

about 6 hours ago