
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of Food for Thought Radio, I round up a difficult week of maternity headlines across the UK and Ireland—from historic legal settlements and reported serious adverse events to unacceptable delays for induction of labour—and reflect on what these stories mean for families, midwives and services. We also look ahead to the imminent Nottingham maternity review by Donna Ockenden and the subsequent rapid review across multiple trusts, and I reiterate my ongoing commitment to the cases of Elizabeth Dixon and baby Belle. My guest “Robin Hood” joins me to discuss how fear, opaque corporate structures and professional regulation intersect with everyday midwifery practice: fitness‑to‑practise pressures, legal threats, data protection claims, and the importance of asserting rights, due process and proper jurisdiction. We finish with practical encouragement for midwives to keep learning and supporting one another, and for mothers and fathers to organise, document, and seek appropriate legal and human‑rights avenues when harm is alleged.
By Victoria RixonIn this episode of Food for Thought Radio, I round up a difficult week of maternity headlines across the UK and Ireland—from historic legal settlements and reported serious adverse events to unacceptable delays for induction of labour—and reflect on what these stories mean for families, midwives and services. We also look ahead to the imminent Nottingham maternity review by Donna Ockenden and the subsequent rapid review across multiple trusts, and I reiterate my ongoing commitment to the cases of Elizabeth Dixon and baby Belle. My guest “Robin Hood” joins me to discuss how fear, opaque corporate structures and professional regulation intersect with everyday midwifery practice: fitness‑to‑practise pressures, legal threats, data protection claims, and the importance of asserting rights, due process and proper jurisdiction. We finish with practical encouragement for midwives to keep learning and supporting one another, and for mothers and fathers to organise, document, and seek appropriate legal and human‑rights avenues when harm is alleged.