The number of babies born in England
and Wales
to women aged 30-49 was up 6,859 last year. Record
numbers of births to older mothers are putting maternity units under pressure -
with the NHS short of around 2,600 midwives, a report found.
The number
of babies born in England
and Wales
to women in their thirties and forties was up 6,859 in 2014, according to the
state of maternity services report 2015 from the Royal College of Midwives
(RCM).
In every
year since 2006, more than 110,000 babies have been born to women in their late
thirties (35-39). This is a level of births not seen since just after the
Second World War, and four times the level of the late 1970s (1977: 25,527),
the RCM said.
For women
in their forties, births have been above 29,000 for four years in a row. These
are again numbers not seen since the years after the Second World War, and are
almost five times the level of the late 1970s (1977: 5,988).
With 661,496
babies born in England
last year, almost 100,000 higher than in 2001, the RCM said in the report that the
NHS is short of around 2,600 midwives.
The
shortage of midwives is made worse by the ageing of the midwifery workforce.
The number of midwives in England
aged 50 or over has doubled from 4,057 in 2001 to 8,169 in 2014.
Last year
is believed to be the first year on record when the NHS employed more than
1,000 (1,014) midwives in their sixties.
The number
aged 65 or over rose from just eight in 2001 to 177 last year, the RCM said.
Cathy
Warwick, RCM chief executive, said: “All women deserve the very best care,
regardless of the age at which they give birth. Women have every right to give
birth later in life, and we support that. But typically, older women will
require more care during pregnancy, and that means more midwives are needed.
“It is
deeply frustrating for midwives that they cannot provide the quality of
maternity care that they want to deliver because they are so short-staffed.”
Source: Mirror.co.uk and Tue Metro
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