
Streeting launches investigation into maternity services after families ‘gaslit'
Mr Streeting, who has been meeting families who have lost babies to poor maternity care, told the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) conference in London: 'Over the last year, I've been wrestling with how we tackle problems in maternity and neonatal units, and I've come to the realisation that while there is action we can take now, we have to acknowledge that this has become systemic.
'It's not just a few bad units. Up and down the country, maternity units are failing, hospitals are failing, trusts are failing, regulators are failing.
'There's too much obfuscation, too much passing the buck and giving lip service.'
Mr Streeting apologised on behalf of the NHS, having met families in Nottingham and around the country whose children have died or been injured.
Senior midwife Donna Ockenden is currently examining how hundreds of babies died or were injured in the care of Nottingham University Hospitals Trust.
Mr Streeting said: 'All of them have had to fight for truth and justice, they describe being ignored, gaslit, lied to, manipulated and damaged further by the inability for a trust to simply be honest with them that something has gone wrong.
'I want to say publicly how sorry I am, sorry for what the NHS has put them through, sorry for the way they've been treated since by the state and sorry that we haven't put this right yet, because these families are owed more than an apology. They're owed change, they're owed accountability and they're owed the truth.'
The Health Secretary said risk is 'considerably higher' than it should be for women and babies because of a 'crisis' in maternity and neo-natal services.
He added: 'Within the past 15 years, we've seen appalling scandals that blew the lid on issues ranging from care, safety, culture and oversight: Shrewsbury, Telford, East Kent, Nottingham.
'The last government responded with initiatives like Better Births in 2016 and the maternity transformation programme.
'But, despite improvements on some metrics, inequalities in maternal and neo-natal outcomes have become more visible, not less. The rate of late maternal deaths has been consistently rising.
'Babies of black ethnicity are twice as likely to be stillborn than babies of white ethnicity, and black women are still two to three times more likely to die during pregnancy or shortly after birth than white women.
'Tragically, that gap is closing slightly, but partly because more white women are dying in childbirth.'
Other high-profile scandals had deepened the public's mistrust in the state, Mr Streeting continued.
'From the Horizon Post Office scandal to the infected blood scandal, the degradation of responsibility and trust in our institutions is compounding a cynicism and malaise at the ability of British politics to deliver for people.
'This is a dangerous place for a country to be.
'If we do not admit the scale of the failure in maternity services, we're condemning ourselves to etching that mistrust deeper.
'If we cannot admit openly that we as institutions and as a state got this wrong, we'll never be able to fix it or rebuild that trust.
'Too many children have died because of state failure and I will not allow it to continue under my watch.'
The new investigation will consist of two parts.
The first will investigate trusts of greatest concern at the moment, including Leeds, Gloucester, Mid and South Essex and Sussex, 'to hold them to account for improvement', Mr Streeting said.
He added: 'I'm currently discussing with Leeds families the best way to grip the challenges brought to light in that trust by their campaigning, reports in the media and the latest Care Quality Commission (CQC) report, and I'll be ordering an investigation into nine specific cases identified by families in Sussex …'
The second part of the investigation will be a 'system-wide' look at maternity and neonatal care, uniting lessons from past maternity inquiries to create one 'clear set of actions' designed to improve national NHS care.
A National Maternity and Neonatal Taskforce, chaired by Mr Streeting, has also been set up, made up of experts and bereaved families.
The investigation will begin this summer and report back by December.
A new digital system will be rolled out to all maternity services by November to flag potential safety concerns in trusts, while an anti-discrimination programme to tackle inequalities is being launched.
Asked about the cost of the review, Mr Streeting said: 'I suspect it will be somewhat less than the enormous costs we pay in clinical negligence claims.
'Probably the most shocking statistic in this area is that we are paying out more in clinical negligence for maternity failures than we are spending on maternity services. That's how bad things are.
'So, putting together a review team, undertaking the level of analytical work required to produce a really good, high-quality evidence-based report is a drop in the ocean compared to the price of failure.'
Sir Jim Mackey, chief executive of NHS England, said: 'Despite the hard work of staff, too many women are experiencing unacceptable maternity care and families continue to be let down by the NHS when they need us most.
'This rapid national investigation must mark a line in the sand for maternity care – setting out one set of clear actions for NHS leaders to ensure high quality care for all.
'Transparency will be key to understanding variation and fixing poor care – by shining a spotlight on the areas of greatest failure we can hold failing trusts to account.
'Each year, over half a million babies are born under our care and maternity safety rightly impacts public trust in the NHS – so we must act immediately to improve outcomes for the benefit of mothers, babies, families and staff.'
The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) said maternity services are 'at, or even beyond, breaking point'.
RCM chief executive Gill Walton said: 'Every woman and family should leave maternity and neonatal services whole, happy and healthy.
'Yet we know that, for far too many, that isn't their experience.
'Systemic failings and a lack of attention to the warning signs have let those families down and let down the hardworking staff who are trying so hard to provide the care they deserve.
'Everyone involved in maternity services: the midwifery community, obstetricians, anaesthetists, sonographers and, of course, the women and families in their care; knows that maternity services are at, or even beyond, breaking point.
'This renewed focus and commitment by the Health Secretary to deliver change is welcome, and we will do everything we can to support him in doing so.'
Professor Ranee Thakar, president of the RCOG, said: 'The maternity workforce is on its knees, with many now leaving the profession.'
She said that 'for years, maternity units have had too few staff, too little time for training and lacked modern equipment and facilities, resulting in women and babies being harmed.'
She urged the Government to 'not to lose sight of funding and workforce shortages within this'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
27 minutes ago
- Scotsman
'Frustration': Urology waiting time targets missed across the country
Waiting lists are soaring across the country. Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... No health board in Scotland is meeting the SNP government's waiting time standards for urology. Waiting times for inpatient and outpatient urology appointments have increased since 2020 in almost all areas of Scotland, with waits of up to 11 months in some parts of the country over the last five years. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad NHS Lothian is also now running less urology appointments now than it did in 2020 - despite every other health board increasing the number of appointments available each year. Waiting lists are soaring across the country. Professor Alan McNeill is a consultant urological surgeon and trustee of Prostate Scotland - until this spring, he also worked as a urologist at NHS Lothian. He said: 'We are seeing more people self-funding in private clinics because they are having to wait so long for an appointment and that is causing concern and anxiety. 'Those who are able to, and bear in mind many are unable to, are taking matters into their own hands and I don't believe as a society that is what we should be aspiring to.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He added this is causing 'frustration' for both patients and frontline clinicians, and said: 'It depends on the condition but for most it will not get better and it may get worse.' Dame Jackie Ballie MSP, Scottish Labour's health spokeswoman, said: 'Nowhere is the SNP's failure clearer than in the state of Scotland's NHS. The reality is that John Swinney and the SNP have no meaningful plan, no strategy, and no ideas to save our NHS. Dame Jackie Baillie MSP | Jeff'It is shameful that thousands of Scots are having to face agonising waits to get treatment, while the NHS workforce is being pushed to breaking point.' Ms Baillie says her party would cut waiting times and make clearing the NHS backlog their 'day one priority'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The government's standards say patients should wait no more than 12 weeks for a new outpatient appointment (84 days) and no more than 18 weeks for an appointment, diagnostic test and treatment (126 days). At NHS Ayrshire and Arran, outpatient waiting times have increased from 134 days in 2020 to 247 in 2025. For inpatients the average wait time has increased from 105 days to 150 days. This is however down from a high of 334 days in 2023. The number of people on the waiting list in Ayrshire and Arran has also increased from 6,788 in 2020 to 9,246 in 2024. The number of appointments being offered increased from 25,595 in 2020 to 26,300 in 2024. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad At NHS Borders, outpatient waiting times rose from 59 days in 2020 to 124 in 2024. Similarly, inpatient waiting times increased from 99 days in 2020 to 259 in 2024. The number of people on the waiting list soared from 300 in 2020 to 817 in 2024. The number of appointments increased from 1,222 in 2020 to 1,947 in 2024. At NHS Dumfries and Galloway the average waiting time increased from 53 days for outpatients and 58 days for inpatients in 2020 to 101 days and 54 days respectively in 2024. The size of the waiting list increased from 15,401 outpatients and 7,149 inpatients in 2020 to 26,348 outpatients and 9,502 inpatients by January 2025. The number of appointments increased from 3,433 outpatients in 2020 to 6,659 in 2024. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad NHS Fife recorded an increase in waiting times from 52 days in 2020 to 100 in 2024. The number of patients on the waiting list increased from 1,215 in 2020 to 2,820 in 2024. The number of appointments also increased from 3,422 in 2020 to 4,394 in 2024 - this is down from a high of 4,847 in 2023. At NHS Forth Valley, outpatient waiting times increased from 78 days in 2020 to 98 in 2025, and for inpatients it increased from 86 days in 2020 to 110 in 2025. The size of the waiting list in Forth Valley also increased from 2,832 outpatients and 719 inpatients in 2020 to 4,900 and 1,249 respectively in 2024. The number of outpatient appointments increased from 2,249 in 2020 to 5,002 in 2024. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad NHS Lanarkshire saw average waiting times increase from 42 days for outpatients and 100 days for inpatients in 2020 to 246 days and 486 days respectively. This health board recorded an average inpatient waiting time for 486 days in 2023 - almost 11 months. The number of patients on the urology waiting list increased from 834 outpatients and 899 inpatients in 2020 to 2,999 outpatients and 1,402 inpatients by 2024. The number of appointments also increased from 3,309 in 2020 to 6,777 in 2024. Meanwhile at NHS Lothian the waiting times increased from 16 weeks for inpatients and 12 weeks for outpatients in 2020 to 28 weeks and 37 weeks respectively in 2025. The total number of patients on the waiting list increased from 4,473 in 2020 to 6,068 in 2025 - however, the health board is offering less urology appointments than it did five years ago. The total number of patients seen decreased from 2,232 inpatients and 8,423 outpatients in 2020 to 1,609 inpatients and 3,529 outpatients in 2024. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad At NHS Tayside the average wait increased from 93 days for outpatients and 141 days for inpatients in 2020 to 109 days and 125 days respectively in 2025. The number of people on the waiting list increased from 2,438 in 2020 to 4,153 in 2025. The number of appointments increased year-on-year from 12,385 in 2020 to 15,140. At NHS Western Isles, patients are seen by NHS Highland. However the average waiting time increased from 16 weeks in 2020 to 33 weeks in 2024. It also increased from 5.2 weeks to 6.7 weeks for urgent referrals, and from 3.3 weeks to 5.1 weeks for an urgent referral for suspected cancer. The only health board to see their waiting times decrease was NHS Grampian, which also covers urology patients at NHS Orkney. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad NHS Grampian's waiting times decreased from 439 days for outpatients and 113 days for inpatients, to 188 days for outpatients and 128 days for inpatients - still above the government targets. The size of the waiting list increased from 3,855 in 2020 to 5,648 in 2025. The number of appointments available also increased from 15,078 in 2020 to 23,668 in 2024. A spokesman for the Scottish Government said: 'We are focused on bringing down waiting times and to do this the NHS will be delivering 213,000 additional appointments and procedures this year. 'We are targeting investment in speciality areas with the longest waits - this includes an allocation of £6 million for urology. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'This funding will recruit additional consultants, nurse specialists, anaesthetists, and other key clinical roles to bolster workforce capacity and resilience, as well as increase theatre sessions, including evening and weekend working. 'In addition, this will deliver diagnostic improvements, such as the establishment of a diagnostic hub in NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and TRUS biopsy services in NHS Forth Valley.'


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
'I tried storing potatoes with one fruit and the hack actually worked'
Potatoes seem to have a mind of their own - they sprout into something resembling a shuffling cordyceps undead in a flash. But one food storage trick ensures they last longer It's one of life's minor irritations - you've finally summoned the energy to cook a proper meal after a long day, rather than just ordering a takeaway, but when you open the cupboards everything's... gone a bit pear-shaped. Potatoes, in particular, seem to despise being fresh and ready to eat. Neglect them for just a few days, and you could find yourself with a bag full of alien-like tuber horrors sprouting into something that resembles a shuffling cordyceps undead from The Last of Us. Especially in hot summer weather like the conditions we're currently experiencing this August, it can feel like food spoils almost instantly in the warm confines of a British kitchen. Reporter Alex Evans has dug into a potato-preserving hack foodies swear by. It's said to work particularly well in the summer months. It comes after UK households issued warning if they have Nescafé coffee in kitchen. Since I spend my day writing about food storage hacks (it's a living), I decided to put a quite popular potato storage hack to the test - storing your potatoes with apples, writes Alex. According to food storage experts (yes, they exist), keeping potatoes in the fridge with apples will prevent them from going off for 'three times longer' than if they're stored without apples in a cupboard, reports the Express. The science behind it is apparently due to ethylene gas produced by the apples in the fridge. This chemical is released by the fruit as part of its typical ripening process, which is slowed by the colder temperature, in turn keeping the potatoes fresh for longer, too, say the boffins. This same chemical can be used to delay the sprouting of potatoes because it inhibits the metabolism of enzymes in the starch of the spud. I dutifully purchased two standard 1KG bags of spuds from Asda, along with a pack of Golden Delicious apples. One bag had an apple popped in it and was then tucked away in the crisper drawer of the fridge. The other was stashed in a dark cupboard in one corner of the kitchen, sans apple. I kept putting off writing this article for weeks on end, simply because the trick was working too well. Every few days, I'd check, and everything looked the same for the fridge potatoes, while the cupboard ones also seemed fine, until suddenly, they weren't. So, does storing your spuds with apples really make them last longer? Two weeks later: the cupboard potatoes without apples are completely inedible, covered in sprouts and rotting. I've been known to chop off the odd growth and carry on, but these are beyond salvageable. They're grotesquely sprouting into some alien lifeform. The fridge potatoes look as good as the day I bought them; they're flawless, pristine, and still fully edible. In fact, the apple has sacrificed itself to protect its earthy mates because it's shrivelled and starting to rot. But the potatoes are perfectly edible—in fact, with the added chill of the fridge, I'm not sure they're ever going to spoil; it almost works too well. So yes: apples really DO save your spuds - and your fridge even more so. Note: No food will be wasted for science. The rotten potatoes will be chopped up for compost, and the poorly apples will be sliced up for the birds.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Sick and injured Gaza children set for NHS treatment - 'no time for delay'
No10 said plans to bring a first wave of sick and injured children from Gaza are moving 'at pace' as MPs warn there can be no delays to giving vital treatment Sick and injured children from Gaza are expected in the UK for NHS treatment within weeks - with Downing Street saying it is working "at pace". Up to 50 youngsters are understood to be among the first group to be evacuated - and some may be allowed to enter the asylum system. No10 said a cross- government task force is "up and running" - but warned that it is a "sensitive and complex process". The Palestinian Health Ministry said more than 62,000 Palestinians have been killed since October 2023 and over 156,000 wounded. More than 18,000 of the dead are children, it is claimed. Children brought to the UK for medical care will come from hospital with family members via a third country, where biometric data will be collected, it is expected. Keir Starmer's official spokesman yesterday(MON) refused to be drawn on numbers, but said: "There's a task force up and running to deliver this (as soon) as possible. "Patients will obviously be assessed on a case-by-case basis, some will be brought to the UK if that's the best option for their care. We obviously continue to provide significant support in the region as well, for evacuations within the region, to support people desperately in need of care. "And that is on top of the significant aid that we're providing to the region to address the ongoing humanitarian crisis." He said the Government will give updates on the plans "as and when we can", but said: "We are working at pace to deliver it." The health ministry said at least 60 people had been killed in the previous 24 hours. At least seven Palestinians were killed attempting to access aid on Monday morning. Israel has disputed its figures, but hasn't provided its own account of casualties. A small number of children have so far been brought to the UK for specialist medical care via an initiative by Project Pure Hope. These youngsters are being treated privately. The Government's plans, coordinated the Foreign Office, Home Office and Department of Health, is set to see children treated by the NHS. Last month, a cross-party group of 96 MPs wrote a letter to the government urging them to bring sick and injured children from Gaza to the UK. Suspended Labour MP Rachael Maskell, who signed the letter, has insisted that there must be "no delay". She said: "There should be no delay in getting children from Gaza the healthcare they need. "I have met regularly with clinicians on their return from Gaza, who have shared the most distressing stories of the challenges of providing services to children without the equipment and medication that is needed, and in inadequate facilities where they are daily having to make life and death decisions, when in the UK, they know that they would be able to treat and save so many more lives. "It is vital that we do everything to provide healthcare at scale and more so, do everything to stop the killing in Gaza."