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THE MOTHER OF ALL CHALLENGES

Anna Moore

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From giving birth alone to cocooning from the world, discovers the crushing lows and incredible highs of becoming a new mum during a pandemic

When Kerry Watson realised she was pregnant in May 2020, she knew she should feel ecstatic. For two years, Kerry, 30, and her husband Kenneth, 31, had been trying for a baby, a brother or sister for their son Harris. They had even joined the waiting list for fertility treatment.

But the previous months had been among the hardest of their lives. Kerry had already become pregnant at the start of the year, only to miscarry in March just as the pandemic hit. Then her local hospital was in chaos – she’d been left alone in a side room for three hours before a scan confirmed there was no heartbeat. A post-miscarriag­e surgical procedure was not possible because of Covid restrictio­ns. Instead, she was sent home with abortion pills. ‘A month later,

I was pregnant again,’ says Kerry, a trainee psychologi­st. ‘We’d wanted a baby for years – but I was terrified. I’d already seen how alone you are, what the hospitals were like. I wanted to feel happy but I couldn’t.

‘By the time of my 12-week scan in July, I was so nervous,’ she continues. ‘Partners weren’t allowed to go with you so I was on my own again. I remember walking to the maternity desk and the receptioni­st’s first words were, “Can you stand back, please?”’

Happily, Kerry’s baby Alfie arrived safely on 3 January. But she’s not alone in having experience­d a rollercoas­ter year. While many of us have felt frozen in time, the hundreds of thousands of British women who have been pregnant during the pandemic have been on an extraordin­ary journey.

Joeli Brearley is the founder of campaign group Pregnant Then Screwed, which seeks to protect the rights of pregnant women and mothers. ‘We began on 16 March 2020 when pregnant women were classed as “critically vulnerable” to Covid by the chief medical officer,’ she says. ‘However, there was little informatio­n as to what their risk was or what their legal rights were. Our phone lines were instantly jammed with pregnant women asking, “Do I go to work?”, “Do I need PPE?” and it hasn’t changed much since. When it comes to hospital appointmen­ts, what is done by phone or face-to-face or who can be present at the birth has always been up to the hospital trusts – and the rules don’t seem to have been evidence based. At the same time, many pregnant women have had to grapple with being furloughed or faced redundancy. They may have children no longer in school who need looking after. Then, finally bringing a baby home, unable to see family, friends or other new mums. At every stage, there have been so many challenges.’

For Sophie Burns, 23, mother to Cameron, born 1 December 2020, the anxiety kicked in in March when she became pregnant. ‘We’d been trying for a baby for more than a year and I’d had two miscarriag­es,’ says Sophie. ‘My aunt is a midwife and told me to take a break. That was the plan – then I found I was pregnant.’ In any other year, Sophie would have been surrounded by love and support. Instead, there was a lot of isolation. She told her mum the news through Facetime. She continued to work at her job at a bank, but worked alone rather than facing the public. ‘There was constant worry, the health of your baby is always at the forefront of your mind,’ she says. Attending hospital by herself for the scans was, she says, ‘lonely. I thought the situation might make everyone more friendly, but the waiting room was always silent. Everyone is spaced apart. No one talks.’

The uncertaint­y around the birth itself, the ever-changing rules around whether partners could be present has added huge anxiety. Priscilla Appeaning, 32, from London, also became pregnant last March. Since she already had three children she knew how utterly different it was this time round. ‘The rules in my hospital trust were that partners could only be present when labour was “establishe­d” and you’re 4cm dilated. As I got closer to nine months, I was rebelling in my mind. I decided not to go into hospital until I was already in establishe­d labour.’ Ultimately

Priscilla’s husband was by her side when she delivered their son Israel in December.

For Sophie, it was a closer call. ‘I stayed at home for as long as possible, but when we got to hospital, my husband Lee wasn’t allowed past reception,’ she says. ‘He waited in the car park and I was taken to the labour ward, put in a room by myself and told, “Someone will be with you shortly.” After 20 minutes alone, I was crying and getting worked up. A midwife saw how upset I was and told me that Lee could come up. Just having him with me calmed me down.’ The labour wasn’t straightfo­rward – nine hours later, their son Cameron was delivered by caesarean.

Many women did give birth without their partners. Kerry Giddens, 31, a primary school teacher from Lincolnshi­re, had dreaded this happening – yet it did. ‘We already have a daughter, Esme, so I experience­d how different it was this time,’ she says. ‘A lot of the maternity appointmen­ts were done online or by phone. You feel abandoned. All the way through, I’d said to my husband Brian, “I don’t want to do it without you.” He’d say, “I’ll be there.”’

In the event, Kerry had to go into hospital to be induced and was told it might take 24 hours before labour started. ‘The hospital was a 45-minute drive and it was minus one outside,’ says Kerry. ‘Brian couldn’t wait in the car so he had to go home.’ At 2am, the contractio­ns began. The midwife contacted Brian who drove straight over – but his new daughter Ada arrived ten minutes before he did. ‘When he walked in and saw me with Ada already in my arms we were both in disbelief,’ says Kerry. ‘The one thing I hadn’t wanted to happen had happened so there was disappoint­ment – but also relief everything was OK.’

The safe arrival of a baby can wipe out all thoughts of a pandemic, says Kerry Watson, who gave birth to Alfie in Fife, Scotland, where she was allowed to have her husband by her side throughout her labour. ‘You’ve got your baby – you forget about Covid,’ she says. ‘In that room, it’s just us. The world could be ending outside but your son’s healthy and this is the best moment of your life.’

For Sophie, now back home with Cameron, life is magical and lonely all at once. ‘At the moment, if you have a child under the age of one, you can form a bubble with one other household, so I see my mum every day and that’s so important,’ she says. ‘My husband Lee still goes to work – he has a building company – so the days can go very slowly. Sometimes, you think, this is horrible, then Cameron will smile and suddenly it’s the best thing in the world. To have had this light after such a dark year – you feel lucky.’

According to consultant perinatal psychologi­st Julianne Boutaleb, many new mums are worried about the impact of

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 ??  ?? ISRAEL IS PRISCILLA APPEANING’S FOURTH CHILD, SO SHE KNEW HOW DIFFERENT THIS PREGNANCY WAS
ISRAEL IS PRISCILLA APPEANING’S FOURTH CHILD, SO SHE KNEW HOW DIFFERENT THIS PREGNANCY WAS
 ??  ?? KERRY WATSON WITH HUSBAND KENNETH, SON HARRIS AND BABY ALFIE
KERRY WATSON WITH HUSBAND KENNETH, SON HARRIS AND BABY ALFIE
 ??  ?? SOPHIE BURNS, PICTURED WITH HUSBAND LEE AND BABY CAMERON, FEELS ‘SO LUCKY’
SOPHIE BURNS, PICTURED WITH HUSBAND LEE AND BABY CAMERON, FEELS ‘SO LUCKY’

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