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RCM ‘deeply disappointed’ with renewed women’s health strategy

RCM ‘deeply disappointed’ with renewed women’s health strategy
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The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) said it is ‘deeply disappointed’ at the government’s renewed Women’s Health Strategy, describing it as a ‘missed opportunity to address maternity services’.

The renewed strategy was released by the government this week, with the aim of putting women’s experiences at the centre of care and ensuring they are ‘ better heard and served’.

However, the government stated that due to ongoing investigations into maternity services across the country, the strategy ‘does not seek to address safety in maternity and neonatal services’.

The RCM described this as a ‘missed opportunity’ and has urged the government to ensure that, following the inquiries, maternity is placed ‘at the very heart’ of the strategy.

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Gill Walton, RCM’s chief executive, said the college was ‘deeply disappointed’ that maternity services ‘do not feature as a headline priority’ in the renewed strategy.

‘This is a significant missed opportunity and one that is very difficult to understand,’ she said.

‘Pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period are not a footnote in women’s health – they are one of the most significant and consequential phases of a woman’s life.

‘A strategy that treats maternity as an afterthought is not truly a women’s health strategy at all. It is exactly the kind of thinking that has allowed maternity services to reach the point they are at today.’

Ms Walton acknowledged that the strategy contained commitments on ensuring women’s voices shape their care, on supporting families through pregnancy loss and on the principle that services should be held accountable when they fail to listen to women.

‘But a strategy that addresses one part of women’s health while leaving maternity care behind is only doing half the job,’ she said

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Ms Walton urged the government to ensure that this is addressed when the ongoing investigations into maternity care conclude, with any recommendations placed at the very heart of this strategy with the seriousness and urgency that women, families and midwives deserve’.

In the foreword of the renewed plans, the health and social care secretary Wes Streeting refers to the ongoing independent National Maternity and Neonatal Investigation as action being taken by the government to improve safety in maternity services.

The strategy also references the new National Maternity and Neonatal Taskforce, chaired by Mr Streeting, which aims to help deliver ‘safer, more equitable care’ for women, babies and families.

The foreword said that, as a result of ongoing initiatives, it was ‘important that this work continues without restriction and that the government can properly respond to the findings’.

‘This renewed women’s health strategy therefore does not seek to address safety in maternity and neonatal services other than that related to women’s health before and during pregnancy and the actions we are taking immediately to improve maternity and neonatal care,’ it said.

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The strategy does, however, include plans to prioritise health education in schools, communities and healthcare settings to ‘empower women’ with the ‘knowledge and tools they need to help control their fertility’ and ‘prepare for the best pregnancy outcomes’.

It also promises to provide women with access to ‘safe and high-quality contraception, abortion care, fertility services, preconception care and support after pregnancy loss in convenient settings’.

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