Daily Mail

Now over 250 families in baby deaths probe at scandal-hit NHS trust

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

MORE than 250 families have now raised concerns about an NHS trust at the centre of a maternity scandal.

Their cases are being investigat­ed by an independen­t review team set up to look at services at the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals Trust, it was revealed last night.

Many families allege that babies died or were left with lifelong brain injuries as a result of poor care at the Shropshire trust.

The independen­t review was launched by former health secretary Jeremy Hunt in April 2017 when it was looking into 23 cases. But that number has increased ten-fold in what could be one of the NHS’s worst maternity care scandals.

In the last month, two officials in the trust’s maternity department have resigned unexpected­ly amid rumours they were

From the Mail, August 2018 pushed. Deirdre Fowler, director of nursing, midwifery and quality, announced she was leaving three weeks ago to take up a new post closer to her family. Sarah Jamieson, the trust’s head of midwifery, said she would be departing the following week to pursue an ‘exciting opportunit­y’ elsewhere in Shropshire.

The Mail has been told that both managers were told to leave by more senior executives, although the trust insists their departures were nothing to do with the inquiry. Last week, NHS officials were forced to axe a panel of experts set up to supervise the review amid concerns of a cover-up.

The experts included a representa­tive from the Royal College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynaecolog­ists (RCOG) and one from the Royal College of Midwives (RCM).

In 2017, the RCOG went into the maternity services in Shropshire and wrote a highly critical report which was never passed to watchdogs.

Instead it was persuaded by hospital bosses to produce a glowing progress review implying services were safe. Meanwhile, the RCM has long encouraged women to give birth naturally, without caesareans.

This agenda has partly been blamed for the problems at Shrewsbury and some women claim their babies were harmed because midwives failed to intervene. Rhiannon Davies, whose daughter Kate died in 2009 following failures by midwives, said: ‘The decision to select compromise­d, self-interested individual­s to people the scrutiny panel was offensive and legally questionab­le.

‘Each had a vested interest in covering up personal failings and closing down the review.’ About 5,000 women a year give birth in the trust’s maternity services, which include a main maternity department and five smaller midwife-led units.

Failures have been attributed to a lack of training, a culture of denial and a failure to intervene when labours went wrong.

The review is being led by independen­t midwife Donna Ockenden. In a letter to families last week, she confirmed that more than 250 cases were now being examined. She said the creation of the panel of experts had ‘caused confusion and upset for some families’, adding that she wanted to reassure those ‘who have bravely come forward to participat­e’. The trust declined to comment.

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