South Wales Echo

More cases for inquiry into Cwm Taf maternity services

- ADAM HALE echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AN INVESTIGAT­ION into maternity services at a health board has been expanded to 160 cases.

An independen­t panel overseeing improvemen­ts at maternity units run by Cwm Taf University Health Board was appointed after 22 neonatal deaths and five stillbirth­s were uncovered at two of its hospitals in South Wales.

Cwm Taf was put into special measures by the Labour-run Welsh Government in April 2019, following investigat­ions into standards of maternity care at Prince Charles Hospital in Merthyr Tydfil and Royal Glamorgan Hospital near Talbot Green between 2016 and 2018.

Yesterday, the panel’s fourth progress report said 10 new self-referrals since the last progress report six months ago have now increased the number of episodes of care under investigat­ion to 160.

It will also begin releasing its findings in the autumn to mothers and families, and produce its first report available to the public summarisin­g the key themes emerging from this category towards the end of the year.

The September 2020 progress report said the health board had done “remarkably well” and so far delivered 53 of the 79 recommenda­tions within its maternity improvemen­t plan.

But the panel admitted it would have to revisit some of the “signed- off ” improvemen­ts at a later date, due to the pressures of coronaviru­s, meaning its validation process had not been as “robust” as it would have otherwise been. Investigat­ors have had no opportunit­ies to visit the hospitals, it said, and have had to rely on paper evidence and conversati­ons with senior managers and clinicians using remote technology.

The number of recomm e n d a t i o n s wh i ch remain to be delivered relate to culture change and leadership capacity, and managing concerns and complaints.

Health minister Vaughan Gething said both the panel and the health board had remained committed to delivering improvemen­ts within maternity and neonatal services, despite the “difficult and challengin­g” circumstan­ces of the Covid-19 pandemic.

He said: “The panel has confirmed there is evidence of incrementa­l progress, with a further 12 of the Royal Colleges’ recommenda­tions having been signed off during this period.

“This is commendabl­e progress given the pressures resulting from Covid-19 and stands as testament to the hard work and determinat­ion of the staff delivering maternity and neonatal services.

On review findings being shared with families, he said: “This is an important step towards providing answers for women and families who may have had a negative experience of maternity services and I welcome this continued progress.

“Moreover, it will provide valuable learning for the health board and ensure that the experience­s of women and families remain the driving force of the organisati­on’s improvemen­t journey.”

Andrew RT Davies, the Welsh Conservati­ves’ shadow health minister, said it will be an “extremely distressin­g time” when bereaved parents are told of the findings of the investigat­ion, and called for them to be supported.

He said: “I cannot even imagine what the parents, whose lives have been so cruelly affected, have been going through for the past few years, and while I hope that the findings may begin to bring a sense of closure, it is going to be an extremely distressin­g time for them.”

He added: “It’s all well and good hearing the usual lines of ‘this has been an experience of learning from past mistakes’, but that is likely to be little comfort for the grieving parents.

“They need the support now as much as before, because revisiting the circumstan­ces of their child’s death will only serve to reopen old wounds.”

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 ??  ?? The Royal Glamorgan hospital and below, Health Minister Vaughan Gething
The Royal Glamorgan hospital and below, Health Minister Vaughan Gething

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