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Women share stories rare pregnancy complication in awareness campaign

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A rare pregnancy complication has led to emergency surgery, including hysterectomies, after staff failed to detect it in affected women.

Scores of women have come forward to tell their stories of how they were affected by placenta accreta spectrum, or PAS, since the launch in February of a campaign to raise awareness among NHS staff and mothers-to-be of the dangers it poses.

One of them lost so much blood while giving birth that she has had to give up working as an NHS operating theatre nurse and suffers from PTSD.

Another lost six litres of blood and blames her daughter’s cerebral palsy on the stroke the child had while hospital staff were battling to save her life after an emergency caesarean section. Others have suffered permanent damage to their bladder or bowels.

Erin Cooper was never assessed for PAS even though she regularly bled heavily from 26 weeks into her pregnancy until she delivered her baby by emergency C-section at 33 weeks in 2024.

She said: “What I didn’t know, what no one had diagnosed, was that my placenta was abnormally and dangerously attached.

“The haemorrhage was catastrophic. I lost 4.5 litres of blood. I needed a massive blood transfusion, 13 units in total, and to save my life they had to perform a hysterectomy.

“It was like a murder scene. I now have PTSD around blood. I was a theatre nurse. I’ve had to change jobs and can no longer work in a patient-facing role.

“I get panicky when I hear sirens. I can’t drive past the hospital without feeling like I’m about to have a panic attack.

“I feel a deep loss of my womanhood. I’m now going into early menopause. Not a day goes by when I don’t think about being infertile at 33.”

PAS is associated with a history of C-section birth, while assisted fertility using in vitro fertilisation also increases the risk.

It occurs when the placenta, which gives the foetus nutrients and oxygen, grows too deeply into the wall of the woman’s uterus and blocks some or all of the cervix.

This makes the usual separation of the placenta from the uterus during birth difficult.

One hundred women who are concerned about how medical teams dealt with their PAS have contacted Amisha and Nik Adhia, who set up the Action for Accreta campaign.

The couple have collated the women’s experiences into a dossier of stories that vividly illustrate how often the condition goes undetected and the appalling physical consequences for those involved.

Seventy-five of the 100 cases are from around the UK and the others from abroad. In other cases, mothers suffered permanent damage to their bladder or bowels.

Six out of 10 of the 100 women say their PAS went undiagnosed, increasing the risk of them bleeding to death.

The 100 cases reveal “a dangerous gap in maternity care” and “systemic failures” that should prompt UK hospitals to do much more to train staff how to spot and treat PAS once it is diagnosed, say campaigners.

Politicians from all the main parties at Westminster are supporting their call for a major overhaul in how the NHS manages the condition.

Chloe Robinson from Burnley was taken to hospital in the middle of the night when she began bleeding heavily at home at 34 weeks pregnant in July 2024.

She said: “In theatre they discovered I had placenta accreta, something no one had suspected.

“They had to get several members of staff who were on call into the hospital because they weren’t prepared. I lost six litres of blood and had a hysterectomy to save my life.

“My daughter had a stroke, which I believe was due to the traumatic birth [and] she now has cerebral palsy.

“If they had found the condition before, none of this may have happened.”

A woman is at higher risk of PAS if she has had a previous birth by caesarean section because the placenta of her new pregnancy can attach itself to the scar of her C-section.

It is unclear exactly why IVF seems to also heighten the risk of the condition.

Doctors believe that the process of transferring and implanting an embryo into the woman during treatment may explain it, though they add that the extra risk posed by IVF is “small”.

Jeremy Hunt, the ex-health secretary who chairs Westminster’s all party parliamentary group on patient safety, urged NHS leaders to learn from the stories.

“Nik and Amisha have highlighted an important and under-recognised issue in maternity care,” she said.

“These stories and the Action for Accreta campaign highlight worrying gaps in how PAS is identified, recorded and managed across the NHS.

“Addressing these will require a more consistent, system-wide approach, including improved data, training and clinical preparedness.”

Pregnancy

£50m initiative aims to tackle disparities in maternal healthcare

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A £50m maternity consortium will bring together UK clinicians, researchers and communities to tackle the most critical gaps in maternal care.

Funding from the National Institute for Health and Care Research has established the NIHR Inequalities Challenge: Maternity Disparities Consortium under the leadership of the University of Birmingham and Newcastle University.

Higher education bodies, NHS organisations, community groups and voluntary organisations from across the UK will work together through the programme.

The NIHR has committed £50m over five years to support research led by clinicians, researchers and communities across the consortium.

Professor Joht Singh Chandan, consortium co-lead for research at the University of Birmingham, said: “National attention on maternity safety and equity has never been greater, but ambition must now be matched by evidence and implementation.

“Through this consortium, we will work across the UK to understand what works, for whom and in what contexts, and to ensure that research leads to practical changes in care for the women, babies and families who need them most.”

The launch comes at a pivotal moment for UK maternity care, with growing national attention on improving safety, equity and women’s experiences of care.

The government’s renewed Women’s Health Strategy highlights the need to improve care before and between pregnancies for underserved communities.

Against that backdrop, the consortium will generate the evidence, interventions and research capacity needed to help turn national ambition into practical improvements for women, babies and families.

University of Birmingham is leading work to improve maternity care pathways across the antenatal, intrapartum and postnatal periods.

Antenatal care covers pregnancy before labour, while intrapartum care refers to care during labour and birth.

The consortium will examine how women and families can be better supported before pregnancy and between pregnancies.

This includes improving access to advice and care that can help people prepare for pregnancy, manage existing health conditions and reduce risks before they build up.

Other research will focus on improving care during pregnancy, birth and the early weeks after birth.

This will include work on major causes of poor maternal health, such as high blood pressure, diabetes in pregnancy, obesity, perinatal mental health and complications during recovery after birth.

Professor Judith Rankin OBE, consortium co-lead for research and capacity development at Newcastle University, said: “This funding represents a critical opportunity to make the step change we need to improve outcomes for women and their babies.

“Alongside the research, the Consortium will be investing in tomorrow’s research leaders today to ensure we have the capacity to deliver on improving pregnancy outcomes, access to, and experience of, care.”

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Liverpool uni secures £18.m for women’s health studio and life-saving tech

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The University of Liverpool has secured £1.8m to test a device for postpartum bleeding and launch a new women’s health studio.

The PPH Butterfly is designed to help control postpartum haemorrhage, which is severe bleeding after childbirth and a leading cause of maternal death worldwide.

The funding will support research into how the device can be used in clinical practice and generate evidence to inform its wider adoption.

The university has launched the Women’s Health Innovation Studio, known as the WIN Studio, alongside the project.

The £1.8m initiative is predominantly funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research, which is providing £1.5m, with additional support from the university.

The PPH Butterfly project will involve a multi-centre clinical trial across the UK and a global feasibility study looking at how practical it would be to use the device in different healthcare settings.

The WIN Studio is led by Andrew Weeks, professor of international maternal health care at the University of Liverpool and a senior investigator at the National Institute for Health and Care Research, and Dr Teesta Dey, a tenure track fellow in the department of women’s and children’s health.

Dr Dey will also lead the PPH Butterfly project.

Its work will cover conditions linked to female biology, including endometriosis, menopause and pregnancy-related complications.

It will also support technologies for diseases that affect women differently or disproportionately, even when they are not usually classed as gender-specific conditions.

Dr Dey said: “Women’s health has often been marginalised within healthcare systems and innovation markets, resulting in treatments, devices and care models that fail to adequately account for women’s specific needs. WIN Studio seeks to change this status quo and reconfigure how health technologies are conceived and delivered.

“The funding from NIHR for this £1.8m project is precisely the kind of innovation the WIN Studio exists to foster: clinically urgent, women-centred, and with the potential to save lives at scale.”

The studio recently hosted an event at Liverpool Women’s University Hospital as part of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority’s Innovation Investment Fortnight.

Seven innovations are currently undergoing clinical testing through the studio, with three developed internally.

The studio will work closely with NHS University Hospitals Liverpool Group and provide clinical, regulatory and commercial support to people developing women’s health technologies.

It will also involve patients and members of the public in shaping research priorities and product development.

Its wider programme includes collaborations involving clinicians, engineers, economists, academics and policymakers.

The project team says the PPH Butterfly is a simple, low-cost device designed to control severe bleeding quickly and with minimal training.

According to the team, postpartum haemorrhage causes around 70,000 deaths globally each year, equal to about one death every seven minutes.

The device previously received £1.1m in funding from the National Institute for Health and Care Research.

The latest £1.5m grant will support a randomised UK trial, in which participants are allocated to different treatment groups by chance, and a global feasibility assessment.

Weeks said: “In an area where women face deep health inequalities, WIN Studio has a vital role to play. By working in partnership with the NHS, local government and communities, we can ensure that research leads to real-world impact.

“Liverpool has a highly integrated ecosystem of academic, clinical and commercial expertise. By bringing these together under a single platform, the WIN Studio aims to act as a national exemplar for equitable health innovation. Transforming the way medical technologies are developed is essential to addressing gender disparities in healthcare outcomes.”

Another product supported by the university, the LifeStart Trolley, has already reached commercialisation.

The small mobile resuscitation trolley allows newborn care to be carried out at the bedside while the baby’s umbilical cord remains intact, enabling delayed cord clamping.

Delayed cord clamping means waiting before cutting the cord so blood can continue flowing from the placenta to the baby after birth.

Clinical trials conducted around 10 years ago found that life-saving care could be provided successfully at the bedside using the trolley.

It was later commercialised by Inspiration Healthcare and is now used in more than 70 UK maternity units and in 36 countries, including Norway, Italy and the US.

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Type 2 diabetes raising twice as fast in younger womem, research finds

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Type 2 diabetes diagnoses are rising twice as fast in women under 40 as in women over 40, new data shows.

Type 2 diabetes is a serious condition and can lead to complications such as heart attacks and strokes. When it develops in younger people, it can be more aggressive and have more severe and acute effects.

Diagnoses in women under 40 rose by 47 per cent between 2017/18 and 2023/24. By comparison, diagnoses rose by 22 per cent in women aged 40 to 79.

During the same period, type 2 diabetes diagnoses in men under 40 increased by 34 per cent.

Diabetes UK said it is concerned about the follow-up care offered to women who have had gestational diabetes, also known as GDM, which increases the risk of developing type 2 diabetes after pregnancy.

Gestational diabetes is high blood sugar that develops during pregnancy and usually goes away after birth, but it raises the risk of type 2 diabetes later.

Colette Marshall, chief executive at Diabetes UK, said: “These figures should be a wake-up call. Type 2 diabetes is rising twice as fast in younger women compared to older women, and a crucial opportunity for prevention is being missed. Every diagnosis is life-changing, but when it develops in younger people, type 2 diabetes is even more aggressive.

“Pregnancy shouldn’t be a pathway to ill health. Yet despite facing a much higher risk of type 2 diabetes, too many women with GDM receive little or no follow-up care after pregnancy.

“As the Government turns its Strategy into action, support for women who have had gestational diabetes must not be overlooked.”

Last year, the NHS published the first national GDM audit for England in 2024/25, which revealed inconsistencies in follow-up care.

Only 57 per cent of women with GDM received an annual HbA1c test, which should be offered to every woman with GDM.

An HbA1c test measures average blood sugar levels over the previous two to three months.

Only 4.5 per cent of women had received support through the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme.

The report also found that 11 per cent of women developed prediabetes within five years of having GDM, while 15 per cent developed type 2 diabetes within 10 years.

Prediabetes means blood sugar levels are higher than normal and a person has a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

A recent survey funded by Diabetes UK also found that more than a third of women with GDM felt abandoned by healthcare services after giving birth.

If you live in England and have had gestational diabetes, you can self-refer to the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme, which supports people at risk of developing type 2 diabetes. If you live in Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales, you can speak to your GP about support.

Diabetes UK has written to women’s health minister Baroness Merron calling for urgent improvements to postnatal support for those diagnosed with GDM during pregnancy.

GDM affects between 10 and 20 per cent of pregnant women, but Diabetes UK said cases have long been underreported and UK-wide data on the condition has not been readily available.

The charity said poor follow-up care for women who have had GDM may be contributing to rising rates of type 2 diabetes in younger women.

It is calling for consistent postnatal follow-ups for women after GDM, more referrals to the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme, greater accountability for improvements in postnatal care, and action on inequalities affecting women from deprived and minority ethnic communities.

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