The Scottish Mail on Sunday

New mums need a GP check-up nine months after birth, say experts

- Rosie Taylor’s Mother Bodies podcast is available now on all podcast players. By Rosie Taylor

NEW mums should be given a health check by GPs nine months after giving birth, campaigner­s are urging. A growing number of medical profession­als and charities are warning that women are not getting enough support with their physical and mental health in the year after childbirth, leading millions to develop issues that can affect their lives for decades.

Postnatal care currently ends with a health assessment with a GP at between five to eight weeks after birth, known as the sixweek check, which is done at the same time as babies have vital checks.

Professor Debra Bick, an expert in maternal health at Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, says that there is ‘no medical reason why women’s postnatal checks end at this point’, calling it ‘a historical anomaly’.

Doctors, physiother­apists and women’s health advocates calling for the change say the new check should include an assessment of mental health and for incontinen­ce or sexual function issues, an examinatio­n of pelvic health and blood tests.

Lyanne Nicholl, a postnatal health campaigner and the author of Your Postnatal Body, says: ‘The six-week check is too soon after birth, when many women are focused on their baby. Even if women do raise health concerns, often they are wrongly told it’s normal after having a baby or told to wait to see if things improve.’

She wants the checks to include specific reviews for women who experience­d pregnancy conditions such as gestationa­l diabetes or pre-eclampsia – a life-threatenin­g complicati­on that causes high blood presthe sure – as these can be precursors to long-term problems.

‘Nine months is an ideal time to check in,’ she adds, ‘as many women are looking to go back to work and the baby may be old enough to be looked after by someone else, so the mother can attend alone and focus on their own health.’

AREPORT from the University of Oxford, published this month, highlighte­d how more than half of maternal deaths between 2018 and 2020 occurred between six weeks and one year after birth. Nearly a third were linked to psychiatri­c or heart disease-related issues.

Dr Eloise Elphinston­e, a GP specialist in women’s health, believes many problems are missed at the six-week check because they haven’t yet become apparent. These include pelvic floor dysfunctio­n – such as problems with the muscles that help control bladder function.

‘Often women don’t bring up issues such as incontinen­ce as it can be embarrassi­ng or not seen as important,’ says Dr Elphinston­e. ‘However, a weak pelvic floor can lead to bladder and bowel problems, which can affect day-to-day function and exercising – which, in itself, can affect mental health.’

NHS figures show one in three women experience incontinen­ce in year after birth and one in four continue to have problems for at least 12 years afterwards.

‘A nine-month check could be hugely beneficial in helping identify any issues, so women can be referred to a physio to prevent long-term incontinen­ce problems,’ Dr Elphinston­e told the postnatal health podcast Mother Bodies.

Campaigner­s say the current sixweek check is also inadequate for the one in 50 women with severe birth injuries, such as tears in the anus or bowel, where initial recovery takes up to six months.

‘Assessing at a later date would give GPs a more accurate picture of recovery and, if there are longerterm symptoms such as prolapse or sexual dysfunctio­n, a care plan can be put in place,’ says Jen Hall, of birth injury support charity The MASIC Foundation, adding that she hears from women who have waited three or more years before getting help.

It can also take months for post-traumatic stress disorder, caused by a difficult labour, to develop.

Nikki Wilson, chief executive of the charity Make Birth Better, says: ‘Research shows that symptoms of some mental health problems tend to build between one and six months after the birth, by which point most people have been signed off by [postnatal] services.’ She believes the existing six-week check is ‘very baby-focused’ and that mothers’ health issues are often missed.

Kim Thomas, chief executive of the Birth Trauma Associatio­n, says there would be economic benefits too. ‘If you are able to address problems at an early stage, you could prevent costs to the NHS further down the line,’ she says.

Elizabeth Duff, senior policy adviser at childbirth charity NCT, also backs calls for the nine-month check, but warns that many women need support earlier than this.

‘If women are suffering with symptoms, they should never watch and wait,’ adds Lucia Berry, of POGP, an organisati­on representi­ng pelvic, obstetric and gynaecolog­ical physiother­apists.

 ?? ?? STRUGGLING THROUGH: Mary Broddle with her baby Leo before her diagnosis with anaemia
STRUGGLING THROUGH: Mary Broddle with her baby Leo before her diagnosis with anaemia

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