Hundreds of mothers and babies died due to failures of 'toxic' hospital trust, review findspublished at 17:55 BST
Image source, PA MediaHundreds of mothers and babies died or were harmed due to "deep rooted, systemic failures" in maternity care, a review into services run by Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust has found.
Throughout the day, we've heard from the report's author Donna Ockenden, the affected families, the trust and the health secretary - here's a look back:
What the review found - at a glance
- Experts concluded there were "potentially avoidable" outcomes relating to 444 maternity cases examined up to May 2025, alongside 76 neonatal cases
- Different care may have altered the outcome for 260 babies who died or were harmed, the review team told the BBC
- Ockenden's review also found a "bullying, toxic culture" at the trust and "persistent failure to listen to mothers and fathers"
"Deep sense of anger": How families responded
- Gary Andrews, whose daughter Wynter died 23 minutes after being born in 2019, says: "If you'd listened to concerns, there would be hundreds of babies still alive"
- Sarah Hawkins, a whistleblower of the maternity scandal whose daughter Harriet was stillborn in 2016, says "the cover-up was horrific"
- Dr Jack Hawkins, says "the relentless, and at times, unbearable 10-year campaign, has resulted in the profound sadness and deep sense of anger that we learn of the full extent of the scandal at NUH"
What's next?
- Health Secretary James Murray apologised on behalf of the NHS, and said the government would take immediate steps - including expanding Martha's Rule
- "I just want to be clear, no options are off the table," he said after families called for a statutory public inquiry across England
- The trust, who accepted responsibility for the failings and apologised, said that "whilst there is more to do, important changes have been made", adding: "We recognise that trust is earned through actions, not words"
We're now ending our live coverage but we have more on this story across the BBC: a wrap-up of the report at a glance, an upsum of what we heard today, a closer look at the families' reactions and analysis from our social affairs correspondent.







