Showing posts with label Relational care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Relational care. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 July 2026

Maternity scandals commentary keeps blaming 'normal birth' ideology. The real problem is broken systems

Another damning report into a maternity unit, another round of the same argument. Last month, Donna Ockenden's review into Nottingham's maternity services found 520 families had suffered avoidable harm, including 162 deaths. It is the latest in a tragic line of UK inquiries stretching back to Bill Kirkup's 2015 report into Furness General Hospital, where 11 babies and one mother died avoidably—among them Joshua Titcombe, son of patient-safety campaigner James Titcombe. Writing in the BMJ, Titcombe argued that a "damaging ideology" that prizes natural, "normal" childbirth over safety continues to cause preventable harm, and that inquiry after inquiry reports the same symptoms without confronting the root cause. I responded in the same pages. I don't think he's wrong that ideology causes harm. But I don't think the ideology in question belongs to midwifery. 

Shifting the Battlefield 
I wrote a paper 20 years ago about the politics of Australian midwifery. Back then, the fight was over whether midwives should be allowed to practise autonomously at all. That fight is largely over. Midwives here can prescribe, order tests, and bill Medicare; every state and territory now has a senior midwife advising government. What hasn't changed nearly as much is what happens to the small number of women each year for whom something needs to go differently, and that's exactly where the harm in these UK inquiries keeps turning up. If you read what the inquiries say, rather than what popular commentary claims they say, they don't conclude that "midwives got it wrong" or "obstetricians got it wrong." Instead, they describe: 
  • Wards operating without safe staffing thresholds. 
  • Fragmented multidisciplinary teams that do not communicate. 
  • Toxic workplace cultures where clinicians are too afraid of blame to say, "I think something's wrong here." 
  • Critical warning signs missed because nobody has the time, continuity, or standing to notice them.  
Occasionally, a report finds a rigid determination to achieve a vaginal birth that overrides a woman's or baby's obvious need for medical escalation. Yet both failures share a root cause, a system that doesn't give the people inside it the room to notice change and respond to it. That is a textbook definition of organisational failure. It is not a verdict on a philosophy of birth. 

The Best-Evidenced Infrastructure We Aren't Using 
This distinction matters because arguing about "normal birth versus medical intervention" distracts from the one intervention the evidence says reliably works: continuity of midwifery care. This is a model in which the same midwife or small team cares for a woman throughout pregnancy, birth, and the postpartum weeks. It sounds like a nice-to-have, but the data proves it is safety infrastructure. Recent studies, including work covering disadvantaged and First Nations communities, link continuity of care to fewer premature births, fewer unnecessary interventions, and fewer babies needing intensive care (Kuipers et al 2026, Lundborg et al 2025; Forster et al 2026). It works for much the same reason a GP who has known you for years notices subtle health shifts that a stranger in an emergency department might miss. Someone who knows your baseline can detect changes earlier, allowing for intervention before they become a catastrophic emergency. Yet, most Australian women still don't get this care. Not because the evidence is thin, but because our funding models, rosters, and hospital structures were built around short, disconnected appointments rather than relationships. Rebuilding a public hospital system around relationships is genuinely hard organisational work. It is not an ideological debate.

Understanding Physiology is Not an Ideology 
Supporting normal physiological processes is fundamental biology. Every area of medicine seeks to preserve normal physiology whenever possible: 
  • Cardiology supports normal cardiac function. 
  • Endocrinology supports normal glucose regulation. 
  • Neonatology supports normal transition after birth. 
Maternity care should be no different. Understanding physiology does not mean refusing intervention. It means recognising how the body functions normally, creating environments that support those processes, and intervening promptly when physiology is no longer sufficient. Unfortunately, this distinction has become deeply blurred in public debate. The phrase "normal birth ideology" has become a convenient shorthand that conflates two entirely different concepts: 
  1. Supporting physiological childbirth based on biological science. 
  2. Pursuing a vaginal birth despite emerging clinical evidence that intervention is required. 
They are not the same thing. Indeed, one of the defining skills of expert midwives and obstetricians is recognising when physiology is progressing normally and when it is beginning to deviate. Good maternity care is not about avoiding intervention; it is about intervening at the right time, for the right reasons, in genuine partnership with the woman. 

The Cost of a Misguided Debate 
If the public is led to believe that birth physiology itself is inherently unsafe, confidence in continuity of midwifery care, birth centres, and community-based services will be undermined, despite decades of evidence demonstrating their safety for appropriately selected women. We risk dismantling the very models of care associated with better outcomes because they have become caricatured. 

Complex systems rarely fail for a single reason. Aviation accidents, nuclear incidents, and major industrial disasters are seldom caused by one mistake; they arise when multiple layers of defense fail simultaneously. Maternity care is no different. The UK reports describe complex systems failures, not a single flawed philosophy. Perhaps the greatest lesson from these inquiries is not that maternity services over-supported physiology, but that they failed to create the organisational conditions in which physiology could be safely observed, understood, and supported. 

Reframing the Path Ahead 
To fix this, we need to completely reframe the debate: The opposite of intervention is not normal birth. The opposite of intervention is neglect. Good maternity care lies precisely between those extremes: understanding physiology well enough to support it when it is healthy and recognising early when it is no longer safe. This perspective moves us beyond the polarising language of "normal birth versus intervention" and towards what the inquiries consistently point to. Safer maternity care depends on well-functioning systems staffed by professionals who work collaboratively, listen to women, and act decisively when circumstances change. 

We already know what makes maternity care safer: continuity of relational midwifery care, adequate staffing, psychologically safe teams, respectful multidisciplinary collaboration, informed decision-making by the woman, and organisations that learn rather than blame. 

These elements are not in competition with physiological birth; they are the very conditions that enable physiology to be supported safely and intervention to occur when needed.

Saturday, 2 August 2025

Reorienting Safety Culture in Maternity Care

Why “Patient Safety” Falls Short and What We Must Do Instead

Introduction: Time for Change

In healthcare, 'patient safety' is a foundational concept (Institute of Medicine, 2000). Preventing harm and promoting high-quality care are essential. In maternity care, the term patient safety is embedded within a medicalised, hospital-centric model that can be at odds with midwifery philosophy and the experiences of birthing women.

We must ask: Safe for whom, and by whose definition? This blog post argues for a shift in safety culture; from a focus on protocols and risk aversion to one that centres each woman’s wellbeing and safety in all its dimensions.

Please note: throughout this blog post, I use gendered language (e.g. “maternal,” “mothers,” “women”) with the acknowledgement that some who give birth do not identify as women.

The Problem with 'Patient Safety' in Maternity Care

The term 'patient safety' emerged from a hospital risk-management paradigm focused on preventing clinical error (Institute of Medicine, 2000). It assumes that the care recipient is ill, passive, and dependent, and that safety is achieved through compliance and protocol.

This framing is a poor fit for maternity care. Childbirth is not an illness. The majority of women are well, and the birthing process, when supported physiologically and respectfully, often unfolds safely without intervention (Consensus statement, 2013).  The term patient strips women of agency, 
embedding a power imbalance, positioning them as objects of care, rather than autonomous participants. It reinforces a culture where decision-making is top-down and where deviation from protocol is seen as dangerous, regardless of the woman’s values or the context. Safety in this context is too often reduced to physical outcomes alone. While survival is of course paramount, the ‘patient safety’ focus on physical outcomes neglects emotional, psychological, cultural, and relational safety, all of which profoundly impact a woman’s experience and recovery (Bohren et al., 2015).

Consequences of a Misaligned Safety Culture

  • Over-medicalisation: Risk-averse environments may lead to unnecessary interventions that increase morbidity and trauma (Birthrights, 2013).
  •  Disempowerment: Women may be coerced, ignored, or denied informed choices “for their own safety” (Keedle et al., 2022).
  • Moral injury among midwives: Midwives may be unable to practise in ways that align with their professional knowledge and values (Kendall‐Tackett & Beck, 2022)
  • Structural harm: Racism, cultural insensitivity, and obstetric violence are often overlooked in traditional safety audits (Hailu et al., 2022).

A Midwifery-Informed Vision: Woman’s Wellbeing and Safety

  • Holistic: centring the whole person, physical, emotional, cultural, and social (O’Reilly et al, 2025).
  • Embracing partnership and informed decisions (Esteban-Sepúlveda et al., 2022)
  • Valuing continuity of care and trust (Homer, 2016).
  • Recognising women’s right to define their safety. (Rönnerhag et al., 2018)
  • Safety, in this sense, is not the absence of clinical error: it is the presence of respect, choice, connection, and support (Lyndon et al, 2018)

Practical Steps Toward Reorientation

  1. Replace “patient safety” with “woman’s wellbeing and safety.”
  2. Value relational safety and continuity of care.
  3. Embed emotional, psychological safety and Cultural Safety as essential elements.
  4. Foster reflective, non-punitive team cultures.
  5. Involve women in defining what safe care means.

Conclusion

True safety in maternity care cannot be achieved by clinging to a model that sees women as patients and care as something done to them. We must shift from a safety culture of control and compliance to one of trust, relationship, autonomy, and respect. Language is not neutral and by choosing to centre each woman’s wellbeing and safety, we take a meaningful step toward care that is not only safer but also more just, more respectful, and more human. Safety in maternity care must move beyond checklists and compliance. It must be woman-defined, relational, and holistic. The term “patient safety” no longer serves us — if it ever did. By reorienting our language and our culture toward each woman’s wellbeing and safety, we honour not only midwifery values but the human dignity of every woman giving birth.

Let us choose our words and our paradigms wisely. They shape the care we give.

What do you think? Do you agree? Do you disagree? 

References

Birthrights. (ND). Human rights in maternity care: the key facts. https://www.birthrights.org.uk

 Bohren, M. A., et al. (2015). The mistreatment of women during childbirth in health facilities globally: A mixed-methods systematic review. PLoS Medicine, 12(6), e1001847. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001847

Chauncy, C., Dawson, K., & Bayes, S. (2025). What do safety and risk mean to women who choose to birth at home? A systematic review. Midwifery, 144, 104340. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.midw.2025.104340

 Esteban-Sepúlveda, S., Fàbregas-Mitjans, M., Ordobas-Pages, L., Tutusaus-Arderiu, A., Andreica, L. E., & Leyva‐Moral, J. M. (2022). The experience of giving birth in a hospital in Spain: Humanization versus technification. Enfermería Clínica (English Edition), 32, S14-S22. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enfcle.2021.10.007

Hailu EM, Maddali SR, Snowden JM, Carmichael SL, Mujahid MS. Structural racism and adverse maternal health outcomes: A systematic review. Health Place. 2022 Nov; 78:102923 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2022.102923

Homer, C. (2016). Models of maternity care: evidence for midwifery continuity of care. The Medical Journal of Australia, 205(8), 370-374. https://doi.org/10.5694/mja16.00844

Institute of Medicine. (2000). To err is human: Building a safer health system. Washington. DC: The National Academies Press. [Link](https://doi.org/10.17226/9728)

Keedle, H., Keedle, W., & Dahlen, H. (2022). Dehumanized, violated, and powerless: an Australian survey of women's experiences of obstetric violence in the past 5 years. Violence Against Women, 30(9), 2320-2344. https://doi.org/10.1177/10778012221140138

Kendall‐Tackett, K. and Beck, C. T. (2022). Secondary traumatic stress and moral injury in maternity care providers: a narrative and exploratory review. Frontiers in Global Women's Health, 3. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgwh.2022.835811

Lyndon, A., Malana, J., Hedli, L. C., Sherman, J., & Lee, H. C. (2018). Thematic Analysis of Women's Perspectives on the Meaning of Safety During Hospital-Based Birth. Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal Nursing, 47(3), 324-332. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jogn.2018.02.008

O'Reilly, E., Buchanan, K., & Bayes, S. (2025). Emotional safety in maternity care: an evolutionary concept analysis. Midwifery140, 104220. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.midw.2024.104220

Rönnerhag M, Severinsson E, Haruna M, Berggren I. Qualitative study of women's experiences of safe childbirth in maternity care. Nurs Health Sci. 2018; 20: 331–337. https://doi.org/10.1111/nhs.12558

Supporting Healthy and Normal Physiologic Childbirth: A Consensus Statement by ACNM, MANA, and NACPM. (2013). The Journal of Perinatal Education22(1), 14–18. https://doi.org/10.1891/1058-1243.22.1.14