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

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

NHS maternity units often cover up harmful errors in childbirth, report finds

about 18 hours ago
A picture


Hospitals that cause harm and injury to women and babies during childbirth often resort to a “cover-up” of their mistakes, falsify medical records and deny bereaved parents answers, a damning report has found.“Negligent” care has devastating emotional and psychological consequences for families, disputes between maternity staff have a “disastrous” impact on mothers, and ethnic minority and poorer women have worse outcomes because of racism and discrimination, Lady Amos said.Recent rises in older motherhood and obese women having babies have also contributed to maternity care becoming more complicated, the ex-Labour cabinet minister added in a report the government commissioned amid mounting alarm about NHS childbirth services in England.“The system is not working for women, babies and families, or for staff,” Amos concluded after spending months talking to hundreds of families and maternity staff.“We have seen maternity and neonatal services trying to respond in difficult circumstances and dealing with competing pressures but too often failing to deliver the safe care that women, families and babies expect and deserve, at times with devastating consequences.

”NHS trusts continue to provide poor care because they are doing too little to improve its quality and safety as a result of not learning lessons from previous maternity scandals, she added.“It is a source of continuing distress to families, and great frustration to staff, that the areas identified in previous reviews and investigations as requiring action do not seem to have been addressed or have only been partially addressed.This cycle must stop,” she said.Lack of staff can affect every stage of a woman’s maternity care.It means mothers-to-be face long delays to be assessed by doctors, have a planned caesarean section or start their induced labour.

It also leads to them being unable to have a home birth because no midwives are available, or to attend antenatal appointments that are too brief to properly discuss their pregnancy.Staff shortages and the relentless pressure on maternity units means mothers are sent home after giving birth without being properly assessed and then cannot get through when they phone to seek advice.“It is unsurprising that women and families report a lack of basic care and support,” Amos said.Her 35-page report excoriates NHS trusts for several failings.Amos accused trusts of compounding the trauma of families who have experienced errors or inadequate care by resorting to secrecy rather than telling them the truth about what happened.

“We heard from many families about feeling that there had been a ‘cover-up’ and defensiveness from NHS trusts, the resistance they faced from trusts when requesting their notes and instances of medical notes being amended or redacted,” the report states.One woman told Amos how, three years after her daughter was born, the trust in question “handed my solicitors magical notes that reappeared out of nowhere after three years.Which we know are inaccurate because my mum was taking notes.It [the NHS] shouldn’t have this cloak and dagger over your notes.”Amos is undertaking an independent investigation into maternity and neonatal services in England.

During evidence sessions she has heard how trusts are:Banning families from being involved in investigations into the mistakes they encountered,Conducting inquiries into errors which families think are poor quality and do not properly reflect what occurred,Driving distressed families to instigate legal action as a way of getting at the truth after they were “denied openness and honesty in the aftermath of harm and bereavement”,Failing to treat families who have lost a baby with compassion,Paul Whiteing, the chief executive of patient safety charity Action against Medical Accidents (AvMA), said: “The evidence that Baroness Amos has uncovered shows the shocking lengths that some staff are going to, such as hiding or falsifying medical records, in order to cover their tracks.

“This shows the scale of the challenge to improving maternity and neonatal services and care.”He added: “Sadly, we too often hear similar accounts of secrecy and manipulation of medical records.This, along with other defensive behaviours we see from some hospitals, causes so much additional distress and trauma to a family already struggling with grief, pain or upset.”Hospitals’ refusal to be transparent, and their withholding or falsification of medical records, is “troubling”, Amos said, because it “compounds the harm already suffered through trauma or bereavement” and stops them learning from safety lapses that should not be allowed to recur.Wes Streeting, the health secretary, commissioned Amos’s inquiry last August after a series of maternity care scandals at NHS hospitals, including those in East Kent, Leeds, Morecambe Bay, Nottingham and Shropshire, and soaring costs of the NHS settling negligence lawsuits.

The Nottingham inquiry covers 2,500 cases of alleged poor care and is the biggest maternity inquiry in the NHS’s history.It is due to report in June.An inquiry into maternity care is Leeds is also under way.Staff Amos spoke to told her how public scrutiny and criticism of NHS maternity services is now so intense that some midwives said they “hide their name badges or uniforms in public or lie about their jobs when meeting people outside of work”.MP Layla Moran, who chairs the Commons health and social care committee, said: “It is heartbreaking to yet again hear the stories of families failed tragically by the system, but also of healthcare professionals who have faced vitriol for doing their jobs in difficult circumstances.

”Moran, a Liberal Democrat, urged ministers to instigate urgent, immediate improvements without waiting for Amos’s final report and recommendations, which are due in the next few months,Helen Morgan, the Lib Dems’ health spokesperson, said: “From collapsing ceilings in maternity units to rising injuries and deaths, we have accepted the unacceptable for British women,How much more suffering will the government permit? How many more reports do they need before they act? “Wes Streeting should apologise for the dismal failure to end this scandal after 18 months of Labour drift, which has left things little better than under the Conservatives,”Streeting said: “Baroness Amos’s report lays bare the systematic, sustained and recurring failures in maternity and neonatal care across the country, which have left too many mothers, babies and families as victims of avoidable NHS tragedies,“I want to thank the families who have bravely shared their harrowing stories, and express my deepest admiration for their strength in speaking out to try to ensure that others do not have to endure their trauma.

”He will soon launch and chair a new taskforce that will draw up an action plan to overhaul maternity care, based on the recommendations in Amos’s final report.
societySee all
A picture

CPS issues new guidance on ‘honour’-based and dowry abuse

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has published new guidance for its lawyers to help tackle “honour”-based abuse, with spiritual and immigration abuse included for the first time.The guidance was updated to reflect growing concerns around evolving forms of abuse and to tackle what the CPS described as “emerging harmful practices”.It is provided to prosecutors considering criminal cases, and now covers dowry abuse, immigration-related exploitation and transnational marriage abandonment.In a form of domestic abuse, perpetrators may exploit a person’s immigration status to control and entrap them. The perpetrators can do this by threatening them with being deported or reported to the authorities, withholding vital documents, controlling finances or restricting access to support services

about 18 hours ago
A picture

UK anti-slavery watchdog calls for overhaul of adult sexual services sites

The anti-slavery watchdog has called for a complete overhaul of websites advertising sexual services after an investigation revealed they can act as “accelerators” of exploitation for sex workers using them.While working online can provide enhanced protections for some, a new report from the independent anti-slavery commissioner, Eleanor Lyons, investigated the experiences of women who said they were exploited on the adult services sites, which typically allow users to browse through images and videos of women selling sex in their local area.She reviewed data from 12 websites, interviewed 12 survivors and identified gaps in current legislation for women who operate online doing webcam work, and those who advertise sexual services online and then arrange to meet buyers of the services offline.The report, published on Thursday and titled Behind the Profile: Sexual Exploitation and Trafficking Through Adult Services Websites, highlights weak safeguarding and calls for stronger controls on these sites to prevent exploitation,It also urges an overhaul of the fragmented and ambiguous regulatory framework, which has not kept pace with changes to the sites, and more support for survivors of this form of exploitation.Before such websites existed, sex workers often advertised their services by placing business cards in phone boxes

about 18 hours ago
A picture

NHS maternity units often cover up harmful errors in childbirth, report finds

Hospitals that cause harm and injury to women and babies during childbirth often resort to a “cover-up” of their mistakes, falsify medical records and deny bereaved parents answers, a damning report has found.“Negligent” care has devastating emotional and psychological consequences for families, disputes between maternity staff have a “disastrous” impact on mothers, and ethnic minority and poorer women have worse outcomes because of racism and discrimination, Lady Amos said.Recent rises in older motherhood and obese women having babies have also contributed to maternity care becoming more complicated, the ex-Labour cabinet minister added in a report the government commissioned amid mounting alarm about NHS childbirth services in England.“The system is not working for women, babies and families, or for staff,” Amos concluded after spending months talking to hundreds of families and maternity staff.“We have seen maternity and neonatal services trying to respond in difficult circumstances and dealing with competing pressures but too often failing to deliver the safe care that women, families and babies expect and deserve, at times with devastating consequences

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Ed Davey accuses care home trustee of embezzlement amid watchdog inquiry

Ed Davey has accused a trustee of a learning disability care home of embezzlement and called for watchdogs to take over the charity to resolve a crisis he described as “one my worst nightmares”.The Liberal Democrat leader’s intervention at prime minister’s questions came hours after the Guardian revealed the Charity Commission had opened a serious inquiry into concerns around financial mismanagement and potential misuse of funds at William Blake House.Families of residents at the Northamptonshire-based care home raised the alarm with the authorities after discovering that it faced imminent closure after running up a £1.6m unpaid tax bill and paying its chair of trustees £1m in consultancy fees.The home, one of only a handful of specialist providers of its kind in the country, cares for 22 adults with severe learning disabilities

about 23 hours ago
A picture

People living in UK’s poorest areas have less diverse gut bacteria, study finds

People living in the poorest areas of the UK have a less diverse range of bacteria in their gut, leading to worse health outcomes than their more affluent counterparts, according to a study.The research, led by academics at King’s College London and the University of Nottingham, analysed the gut bacteria of 1,390 female twins across the UK alongside their residential postcodes in order to identify the area’s socioeconomic status.Deprivation was measured using the Townsend Deprivation Index, which takes into account measures such as unemployment and overcrowding, as well as car and home ownership.The gut, or gastrointestinal system, is the route that food and drink takes through the body. It ensures that all the beneficial nutrients are absorbed and used for energy, growth and repair

1 day ago
A picture

The rise of rejection sensitive dysphoria: ‘My chest feels like it’s collapsing’

It makes rejection, teasing or criticism feel unbearable, often prompting a strong physical reaction. Sufferers describe life with a condition that is only just starting to be understoodJenna Turnbull’s chest is tightening. The 36-year-old civil servant, who lives in Cardiff, can picture herself as she speaks: an 11-year-old in her PE kit waiting with the other kids for her lesson to start. “We were outside by the courts waiting to play netball,” she says. “Somebody commented that I had hairy arms, one of the boys

1 day ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Jon Stewart on politicization of USA hockey win: ‘Is Kash Patel a Make-a-Wish man?’

2 days ago
A picture

Down with Love: Ewan McGregor and Renée Zellweger’s perfectly offbeat 60s fantasy

2 days ago
A picture

Maxi Shield, beloved Australian drag queen and Drag Race Down Under star, dies aged 51

3 days ago
A picture

Kenneth Williams and racist attitudes | Brief letters

3 days ago
A picture

Philippe Gaulier obituary

3 days ago
A picture

‘Musicians drank too much and slept on my barn floor’: Andrew Bird on making cult album The Mysterious Production of Eggs

3 days ago