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NHS Trust Chair will commit to new relationship with families affected by failings in maternity care

The Chair of Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (NUH), Nick Carver OBE will publicly commit to a new honest and transparent relationship with the families whose lives have been affected by maternity failings at the Trust.

At NUH’s Annual Public Meeting (APM) on Monday 10 July, Mr Carver will acknowledge that more must be done to gain the trust of families and local communities.

He will also commit to working collaboratively to plan for an apology on behalf of the Board that the families recognise as meaningful.

Mr Carver said:

“For too long we have failed to listen to women and families who have been affected by failings in our maternity services. This ‘brick wall’ has caused additional pain, and this must change.

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“Families should not have to fight to get the answers they deserve and we are committed to gaining their trust, and the trust of all our communities by listening and engaging with them.

“Some families, who we have had the chance to meet have told us they want a meaningful apology that they recognise as meeting their needs, including accountability and a change in the culture. We will work with them and other families to make that happen.

“We recognise there will be families who haven’t had the chance to come forward yet and we will want their views on how we go about putting things right for them too. We agree with the families when they tell us that engagement with them will help us make sustainable improvements to our maternity services.”

The APM will also include an update from Donna Ockenden, Chair of the Independent Review into Maternity Services at NUH. Donna and her team began their review in September 2022. Since then, initial key findings have been shared with the Trust to help support the continuous learning and improvement of maternity care.

Ms Ockenden, said: “Today is the start of a journey for Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust.

“There needs to be rebuilding of the trust between its maternity services, families who use those services and the many families who we know have been avoidably harmed when using the Trust’s maternity services.

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“The Trust has made a commitment today to walk a new path, listening to families and acting upon what they are told. The journey can’t be completed overnight. It is a long journey and needs to happen one step at a time.

“As Chair of the Independent Review into Maternity Services at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust I want to reiterate what a privilege it is for my team and I to be trusted by so many hundreds of local families.

“My promise today is the same promise I made on the first day of the review in September 2022: as an independent review team we will do absolutely everything we can to ensure that every voice is heard, that no one is left behind and not heard, and finally that what families tell us will, without a doubt, contribute to making maternity services safer and more inclusive for all families in Nottinghamshire.”

NUH’s Annual Public Meeting will be held at Nottingham Trent University’s city campus on Burton Street (NG1 4BU) from 10am-4pm on Monday 10 July 2023.

People can register their attendance and find out more about the free event at Annual Public Meeting 2023 | NUH or by email at nuh.communications@nuh.nhs.uk

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