Health secretary calls Amos report on England maternity care a ‘watershed moment’
Health secretary James Murray said Valerie Amos's report on maternity care in England must be a "watershed moment" for how the NHS treats pregnant women and babies. Murray pledged the report would lead to significant improvements and that "toxic dynamics" damaging relationships between hospital staff would be dismantled. A powerful maternity commissioner will be appointed to push through an urgent transformation of childbirth care. The Amos report found that maternity care had not kept up with major changes such as older motherhood and the rise in caesarean sections. Murray criticized a culture where maternity units prioritize reputation over openness to families when mistakes occur. Amos identified "shocking" failings including women being ignored, poor triage, chronic understaffing, and lives being put at risk. The report is the second in less than a week to advise a dramatic overhaul of maternity care, following Donna Ockenden's inquiry into the Nottingham maternity scandal. Amos made eight main recommendations, including an overhaul of maternity triage services and rooting out racism and discrimination in the system.
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Sources: The Guardian
