Ockenden report live: major NHS maternity review finds hundreds of deaths and serious injuries at ‘toxic’ trust | NHS

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Ockenden report live:


More than 500 mothers and babies died or were harmed at ‘toxic’ Nottingham NHS trust, report finds

Denis Campbell

Denis Campbell

More than 500 mothers and babies came to harm or died as a result of inadequate care in Nottingham, an inquiry into the NHS’s biggest ever maternity scandal has revealed.

A total of 444 women and 76 newborn babies suffered “potentially avoidable” outcomes because they received substandard treatment over 13 years from Nottingham University hospitals NHS trust (NUH), a damning report led by the childbirth expert Donna Ockenden has found.

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The 401-page document paints a stark and forensic picture of maternity care at its two hospitals – Queen’s medical centre and Nottingham city hospital – where “multiple” women experienced dangerously poor and sometimes “cruel” care, understaffing was routine, lessons from patient safety incidents were not learned and bullying by “intimidating cliques” of staff was rife.

Ockenden and her team of maternity experts who undertook the three-year inquiry investigated the deaths of 27 mothers between 2006 and 2024 and “identified failures in care that may have or substantially impacted on the outcome in six deaths”.

Staff’s failure to listen to women and to act promptly on concerns they raised was one of the “common failures” involved in maternal deaths, they found, as well as delays in women having scans.

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The review was ordered in 2023 after families warned that maternity care at NUH care was unsafe. It also examined cases in which babies died as a result of being starved of oxygen during birth or picking up a hospital-acquired infection, or because midwives and doctors did not manage the mother’s labour properly or provided poor postnatal care.

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Ockenden said the report also addresses “clearly and with evidence the inequalities that shaped who was most harmed”.

These included women from black, Asian and other minority ethnic backgrounds, those living in deprived areas of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire, women with mental health needs, and women who did not speak English as a first language.

These are amongst the women who face the greatest barriers to being heard, and who were most likely to have their concerns dismissed or minimised,” Ockenden said.

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