Readers respond to Lady Amos’s damning interim report on the state of England’s NHS maternity care Once again, we are faced with a report detailing the failures in maternity services ( Cruel comments, racism and cover-ups: key findings from England’s maternity care report, 26 February, 26 February ), highlighting deficiencies in both clinical staffing and care environments. Maternity services in the NHS are in crisis, but this is not new information. As clinicians, we have been aware of these systemic pressures for many years. Reports from the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch, now Maternity and Newborn Safety Investigations , along with numerous other inquiries, have already identified the core issues. Collectively, they have produced some 748 recommendations that, if properly implemented, could meaningfully improve care. Instead of directing funding towards implementing these recommendations, resources are being diverted into commissioning yet another review – one that is likely to reiterate what we already know. It is time to redirect investment to where it will make a tangible difference. We must return maternity services to strong, safe foundations: high-quality support, meaningful training and sustainable staffing levels for hardworking clinicians who continue to deliver care in chronically underresourced environments. These professionals strive daily to meet increasingly complex and often unrealistic expectations, frequently shaped by social media narratives that do not reflect the realities and risks inherent in maternity care. Continue reading...