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Thursday, August 27, 2009

British women giving birth in lifts, toilets: Report

LONDON: A shortage of midwives and hospital beds is forcing thousands of British women to give birth outside maternity wards, putting the lives
of babies
and mothers at risk, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

The Daily Mail said births outside maternity wards - in locations ranging from lifts to hospital toilets - went up 15 percent last year to almost 4,000. It said hundreds of women in labour are being turned away from hospitals because they are full.

The paper quoted official information obtained by an opposition MP as showing women gave birth in ambulances, A&E departments, unspecified areas including corridors, postnatal and antenatal wards and hospital reception areas.

Babies
were born in offices, lifts, toilets and a caravan, according to the Freedom of Information data for 2007 and 2008 from 117 out of 147 trusts which provide maternity services.

Opposition Tory health spokesman Andrew Lansley, who obtained the figures, said the Labour government had cut maternity beds by 2,340, or 22 percent, since coming to power in 1997.

At the same time birth rates have been rising sharply, up 20% in some areas.

Jon Skewes, a director at the Royal College of Midwives, told the paper: "The rise in the number of births in other than a designated labour bed is a concern. We would want to see the detail behind these figures to look at why this is happening."

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