Widespread racism in maternity care, review finds

News imageBBC A woman with dark curly hair tied back is pictured from the shoulders up, standing in front of a brown fence and grass.BBC
Kayla Palmer has been among those to speak out about poor care at the Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust after losing her baby boy in 2024

Racism and discrimination is widespread at the Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, a review into maternity and neonatal services said.

Investigators heard concerns from families and staff who said care varied based on ethnicity or background. Researchers also said they witnessed a racist incident among staff during a visit.

Chief executive Diane Wake said the trust was "deeply sorry" to those whose care "did not meet the standards they have the right to expect".

The trust, which runs the Midland Metropolitan University Hospital in Smethwick, was one of 12 trusts investigated by the Independent National Maternity and Neonatal Investigation led by Baroness Valerie Amos.

News imageSandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust Aerial view of a very large rectangular building, with grey floors at the bottom, and a white roof with orange elements to the side and top.Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust
The Midland Metropolitan University Hospital opened in 2024

The Midland Met Hospital opened in 2024. Before that a consultant-led maternity unit was based at City Hospital in Birmingham with midwife-led units in West Bromwich and Smethwick.

Staff said there was a stigma attached to the quality of Sandwell's service across the neonatal network, with phrases like "typical Sandwell baby" used about children transferred for care elsewhere.

Sandwell is a neighbouring area to Birmingham and comprises town's such as Oldbury, West Bromwich, Smethwick, Tipton, Wednesbury and Rowley Regis.

The report said that SWBH served an area that was more deprived than 91% of neighbourhoods in England, and had a higher-than-average proportion of Asian and black mothers.

Families and staff told investigators language used within the service sometimes suggested patients were "outsiders" or were to blame for their circumstances or outcomes due to cultural beliefs, language barriers or refusal of interventions like induction or caesarean.

Staff described a workplace culture where speaking up felt unsafe, with fears of negative consequences contributing to low morale and behaviour described as bullying. Investigators said they witnessed a racist incident among staff during a two-day visit to gather evidence.

In an open letter to the local community, Wake said the trust was "appalled" by the report's accounts of racism and discrimination.

"It is unacceptable that any woman or family felt they were not listened to, respected or treated fairly because of who they are or where they came from," she said.

Families reported feeling judged and ignored during care. Some said they felt forced to exaggerate their pain to be taken seriously by staff.

One patient said: "Whatever you feel, make it twice and three times worse, otherwise they don't believe you."

Another described reaching breaking point in labour: "I am going to tear out all these tubes and I'm literally going to walk out because I've had enough… I'm going to walk out because you're not listening to me. I'm telling you that I'm in pain."

The investigation also found families were sometimes sent home after raising concerns and told symptoms were "normal" only for serious complications to emerge later. Birth plans, they said, were at times ignored.

Women who had experienced traumatic births or baby loss were sometimes placed on standard postnatal wards alongside healthy newborns.

Some clinicians told investigators they had left the organisation because they believed care was not safe. One said that staff were "overloaded".

"I would almost use the term suffocated by the sheer volume," they said.

Inspectors acknowledged the new Midland Metro Hospital was modern and clean, but said that improved facilities had not necessarily led to better care.

Wake said the trust had appointed a new director of midwifery and head of midwifery, adopted a zero-tolerance approach to discrimination, recruited 25 more midwives and improved maternity triage performance.

Tom and Ewa Hender, whose son Aubrey was stillborn at the trust's City Hospital in 2022, said the report reflected their own experiences.

News imageA woman and a man stand in front of a wooden fence, pictured from the shoulders up. The woman has shoulder-length dark hair and wearing a brown top and grey cardigan, and the man is wearing a blue shirt and glasses.
Ewa and Tom Hender are pushing for a national statutory maternity inquiry

Mrs Hender said: "I think the biggest failing that was a direct cause of Aubrey's death in my opinion was that I wasn't being listened to or that my concerns weren't being taken seriously. When I tried to highlight that Aubrey's movements were less or fainter, I was being dismissed."

She added: "It certainly didn't feel safe at the time and we believe that's why Aubrey's not here today."

Mr Hender described the report on SWBH as "damning".

"It uses quite strong language and it almost reads to me as if it is saying that it is a dangerous trust," he said. "If there is a dangerous trust, who is stepping in to make sure that babies don't die tomorrow?"

The couple say there should be a national statutory public inquiry into maternity services.

Kayla Palmer, 23, from West Bromwich, lost her son Hendrix at the Midland Metropolitan University Hospital in 2024. He was delivered by emergency caesarean on Boxing Day but died three days later after suffering a brain injury linked to oxygen deprivation around birth.

"If I went to another hospital would they have done different? Would my boy be here?" she said.

Palmer said she experienced delays in pain relief and at one point collapsed during labour while a midwife walked past her.

"I hope this taskforce becomes something good. And a very good outcome comes out of it as well. I can only hope," she said.

Palmer is also supporting calls for a national public maternity inquiry.

The review by Baroness Amos heard from more than 450 families and 9,000 staff across England. She said the findings point to a system where too many patients are still not being heard.

Among the report's recommendations was the creation of a national maternity and neonatal commissioner to drive reform.

The government is expected to respond with a national action plan overseen by a new maternity taskforce chaired by the health secretary.

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