Motherhood
Call for urgent global action on women’s health research

Women’s health is being neglected by researchers, prompting calls for urgent action to address major gaps in care across both high- and low-income countries.
Dr Anita Zaidi, president of the Gates Foundation’s gender equality division, said a lack of research is holding back progress in tackling common but often overlooked conditions.
She pointed to innovations ranging from smartphone ultrasound devices to low-cost tools that reduce deaths from post-birth bleeding.
Dr Zaidi said: “From an R&D perspective, it’s been one of the most neglected areas in global health. It’s neglected not just in global health but also in rich countries,”
“Women’s health has just been ignored.”
Giving birth can carry high risks, she added, and maternal health remains under-researched.
The Gates Foundation has identified major research gaps, including in endometriosis, malnutrition and pre-eclampsia.
She highlighted Kenya’s KENSHE study, which led Ireland to adopt a one-dose HPV vaccine schedule – down from the previous three doses – showing how findings in lower-income countries can influence global health policy.
Dr Zaidi urged governments not to cut funding for research, as the US and UK scale back investment.
“We have made so many advances in women’s health, especially in R&D, so now not to have the funding available to scale them really bothers me,” she said.
One project funded by the foundation, involving 200,000 women, found that guidelines for post-partum haemorrhage – a major cause of maternal death – need revision.
Current protocols, including in Ireland, define blood loss of 500ml in 24 hours as mild, but the study suggests care should begin at 300ml.
Dr Zaidi said: “You put it under the mum, with a calibrated sleeve at the end of it so all the blood is captured in there.
“And once they used that sheet and a bundled approach it was so impactful. There was a 60 per cent decrease in severe post-partum haemorrhage.
“The other thing that they realised is the 500ml cut-off is too high, it should be 300ml.
“So now we know we should be treating post-partum haemorrhage when there’s more than 300ml blood loss and we have to act quickly.
“If you could do that, you will save hundreds of thousands of women’s lives.”
Other innovations include AI-powered ultrasound probes that attach to smartphones and cost around 20 times less than conventional machines, allowing midwives in remote areas to assess patients and prioritise care.
She said: “In Sudan, let’s say, where one midwife may be taking care of 100 women, this helps you triage who really needs help the most.”
The device has been described as “a game-changer”, though broader funding is still needed.
She also referenced the Irish Examiner’s recent women’s health survey, which highlighted further gaps in research and care.
The foundation is committing €316m each year from 2023 to 2027 to maternal, newborn and child health.
Bill Gates has pledged to give away 99 per cent of his wealth over two decades, with the foundation set to close in 2045.
Dr Zaidi said: “It’s enough time if we plan for it in the right way, and this is why we wanted to give enough notice.
“For the many of the innovations I’ve been talking about, they can be done in the next 10 to 15 years, but some will need a hand-off.”
Motherhood
Natural birth pressure harming new mothers’ mental health, research finds

Pressure to have a natural birth can cause lasting psychological harm when labour does not go to plan, new research shows.
The study found that the messages women receive during pregnancy are directly linked to the shame and self-blame many feel when those expectations are not met.
For the first time, the research provides an explanation for why unmet birth expectations contribute to psychological harm.
Several women involved in the research said they felt they had not given birth “properly”, even when medical intervention had saved their lives.
Rebecca Matthews, lead author and PhD researcher at the University of Reading, said: “These women were not failed by their bodies, they were failed by the messages they were given.
“Birth trauma does not begin with birth. It begins in the ideology sold to women throughout pregnancy.
“For the first time we can explain precisely how, by showing how birth culture creates a moral standard for women that defines what a good mother does and then leaves them to blame themselves when birth does not match that.
“Until we reform the way we prepare women for birth, we will keep seeing the same devastating consequences for mothers and their babies.”
The researchers interviewed 21 first-time mothers in the UK whose births did not go as planned.
From NCT and hypnobirthing classes, to social media to midwives, the researchers heard how women are surrounded by messaging that frames natural, unmedicated vaginal birth as the “gold standard”, not just medically preferable, but as a mark of being a good mother and the first test of maternal worth.
Research shows around half of women report their birth differed significantly from their expectations, and for the women in this study, all of whom experienced exactly that, the psychological consequences were profound.
Women judged themselves against the internalised moral standard that this ideology had created.
The researchers are calling for antenatal education to stop treating one kind of birth as the goal and to present all birth outcomes as equally valid routes to motherhood.
They also call for better postnatal screening for women whose births did not go as expected, specifically targeting the shame, self-blame and identity disruption that this research identifies as mechanisms underlying birth trauma.
The findings align with and extend the conclusions of the Kirkup, Ockenden and Birth Trauma Inquiry reports, all of which documented how the institutional pursuit of “normal birth” contributed to preventable harm.
This research provides the first theoretical explanation of how that ideology generates individual psychological harm and points to antenatal messaging as the primary site of such preventable harm.
Pregnancy
Wales becomes first UK nation to unite maternity care under a single digital record

System C has completed the national rollout of BadgerNet Maternity across all seven NHS Health Boards in Wales. This is the first time any UK nation has unified its maternity care under a single digital record and patient-facing app.
With approximately 26,000 babies born annually in Wales, BadgerNet connects maternity information across organisational boundaries in the country.
Expectant parents can access their records, maternity appointments and key updates digitally through a single app, wherever they receive care while clinicians have secure access to the right information at the point of care.
The national three-year agreement across all Heath Boards replaces a patchwork of separate local systems and eliminates the need for paper hand-held notes.
Anthony Tracey is director of digital at Hywel Dda University Health Board, the final of the Welsh Health Boards to go live with BadgerNet.
He said: “The rollout of BadgerNet across Wales is a vitally important step forward in modernising our maternity services and providing a consistent service across the country.
“By giving expectant parents direct access to their information and enabling clinicians to share data more effectively, we are strengthening safety, transparency and consistency in maternity care nationwide.”
For expectant parents, the single digital maternity record transforms how they engage with their care.
Instead of carrying paper notes and repeating information at every appointment, parents can access key details, appointments and updates digitally, supporting more informed conversations and shared decision-making.
The result is greater transparency, fewer administrative frustrations and a more joined-up experience throughout pregnancy and into the postnatal period, regardless of which health board they fall under.
For clinicians and Health Boards, the joined-up approach reduces duplication and streamlines handovers across teams and sites. Information is digitally captured once and made available securely wherever it is needed, helping to minimise errors, reduce time spent tracking down notes and support more efficient multidisciplinary working.
At a national level, linking maternity data across Wales creates a foundation for safer, more consistent care.
Aggregated, standardised information enables earlier identification of trends and variation, supports evidence-based policy decisions and enhances long-term service planning.
With a comprehensive view of maternity activity and outcomes across the country, Wales is now better positioned to raise standards for parents, babies and families.
Guy Lucchi, managing director of healthcare at System C, added: “Delivering a truly national approach across all seven Health Boards is a significant achievement for Wales.
“One shared system means information flows with the patient, not the organisation.
“That reduces duplication, supports earlier identification of risk and frees up valuable clinical time.
“Crucially, linking maternity data at a national level provides powerful insight to drive improvement. Health Boards can benchmark, plan services with greater confidence and ensure resources are targeted where they are needed most, while expectant parents benefit from clearer communication and a more connected experience of care.”
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