Inquiry into maternity failings at Nottingham trust expands to more than 1700 cases
An inquiry into failings in maternity care at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust is to be expanded to include the cases of more than 1700 families, making it the largest inquiry of its kind ever carried out in the UK.The ongoing independent review,12 chaired by the senior midwife Donna Ockenden, was commissioned last year to examine failings at the trust, where at least 46 babies sustained permanent brain damage and 19 were stillborn from 2010 to 2019.NHS England has now agreed that the families affected will have to opt out if they do not want to participate in the review rather than opting in if they do. This follows a request from families to change the inquiry’s methodology to allow it to investigate all incidents that occurred.The “opt-out” approach was applied in Ockenden’s separate inquiry into maternity services at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust, which investigated around 1500 cases…
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