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“Clutching her husband’s hand and with agony and exhaustion etched on her face, a young woman struggled into a room in the maternity unit where I worked.
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She was in the early stages of labour with her first baby, she was terrified, in excruciating pain and desperate for any crumb of support…
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…It’s a huge relief to have left the NHS. As an independent midwife in Northwich, Cheshire, I am finally able to help women the way they deserve.
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Calm, supported and not rushed, my mothers give birth in six to seven hours. In the units where I worked, the average labour was ten to 14 hours.
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I feel guilty about the women I let down as an NHS midwife. Weak and in pain, they don’t have the knowledge or strength to stand up for themselves.
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Instead, they end up being patronised by doctors and bullied by midwives into taking drugs they don’t want.
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But what makes me most sad and angry is that those hospital staff – everyone from managers down – are taking advantage of women when they are at their most vulnerable.
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Interview: TESSA CUNNINGHAM
Mail Online: NHS maternity services in meltdown: A former midwife reveals how understaffed wards are sinking into chaos