'Cramped layouts' at maternity unit, says review

News imageGETTY A pregnant woman places her hand on the top and bottom of her baby bump. She is wearing a white cropped top and her pregnant belly is centre of the frame. She is wearing black leggings and is in a living room.GETTY
The report described how Queen Elizabeth Hospital's buildings had an impact on maternity care

A hospital has been found to have "cramped layouts", "visibly stretched staff" and "busy wards" by a national review of maternity services in England.

The Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH) in King's Lynn, Norfolk, was one of 12 trusts examined in a review led by Baroness Valerie Amos.

The report said it was "important" for investigators to see the hospital's buildings after staff and families raised concerns about their impact on services.

Professor Lesley Dwyer, the group chief executive of Norfolk and Waveney Hospitals Group, apologised for the "distress described" in the report and said it recognised the emotional impact on women and babies.

The hospital said it has refurbished its maternity unit, including temporarily moving its delivery suite during safety work linked to reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac).

News imageA close up of a prop attached to wooden plank, attached to a ceiling in a hospital.
The Queen Elizabeth Hospital has Raac and parts of the site are propped up by metal and wooden supports

The report said that some staff described the hospital's estate as "ageing" and "constrained", with concerns around water safety and infection control.

Families described services under pressure, with the report including: "Many spoke about being on busy wards, with cramped layouts, visibly stretched staff and long waits for assessment, monitoring or support."

It added that services were dealing with high demand, with staff "juggling multiple tasks or patients".

The report also pointed to increasing complexity in care. Figures from the trust showed caesarean rates rose at the hospital from 39.73% in February 2023 to 43.97% in February 2026, with induction rates also increasing over the same period.

The review also heard of the recruitment challenges the hospital faced, including a large cohort of staff retiring and difficulties attracting experienced midwives.

One staff member said: "King's Lynn is a very quiet town… so we did lose quite a lot of midwives… that have gone to bigger cities."

The report said new buildings alone would not be enough to improve the hospital's maternity services, adding they also needed "a workforce that is experienced and flexible enough to meet fluctuating demands".

Some parents said they did not feel listened to when it mattered most. One said: "We flagged all the way through that there are signs this baby is not breathing normally… but the stock answer every single time was that's normal."

Another parent said: "If they'd listened an hour earlier, it wouldn't have ended up as an emergency."

News imagePaul Moseley/BBC Prof Dwyer smiles at the camera and is sitting in an office chair. She has blonde hair, a colourful top and long earrings that have various shapes in them.Paul Moseley/BBC
QEH is part of a group of Norfolk hospitals, meaning it was better placed to tackle the long-standing issues affecting them all, said Lesley Dwyer

Dwyer said: "We are sorry for the distress described, particularly where concerns were not fully heard, communication was not clear, or support following difficult or traumatic experiences did not feel as strong as it should have been.

"We must do more to ensure that changes are experienced consistently in the care we provide.

"There is more for us to do, and we will rise to that challenge."

Maternity services at the hospital are currently rated "good" by the Care Quality Commission.

The government said it will act on the findings through a new national taskforce set up to drive improvements in maternity care.

Do you have a story suggestion for Norfolk? Contact us below.

Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.