Get involved: send your photos, videos, news & views by texting bfp news to 80360 or email »
5:45pm Thursday 15th May 2008
A MUM who had to wait eight hours to be transferred out of Wycombe Hospital to give birth has backed our call for Gordon Brown to review NHS cuts.
Jill Hallas, 31, said women were being treated like "second class citizens" by the removal of doctor-led births from Wycombe Hospital.
The mum-of-five feared for her unborn daughter's life during a 40 minute "drive of hell" to Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury.
Women face having to travel direct to the hospital to give birth by next year - five years after changes were agreed.
Some low-risk births will be overseen by midwives at Wycombe - but will be transferred to Stoke Mandeville if they run into problems.
Her call comes as more than 370 readers have responded to our call for Mr Brown to order a review into changes at the hospital.
Health officials agreed in 2004 to remove serious A&E trauma cases - the department has since been renamed - and doctor-led births.
Mrs Hallas, who until now had had all of her children at Wycombe, said: "The most important people are babies and pregnant mums and they are treating us like second class citizens. That is not what we pay our taxes for."
Authorities' claims that the changes would provide better care by having more doctors on one site were "rubbish" she said.
"I have lived here for 31 years and the standard of care has been excellent.
"In your local hospital you should have basic care and, to me, that includes having a baby."
In a direct appeal to Gordon Brown she said: "Please save our hospital."
Mrs Hallas - who has a history of placental abruption - was rushed to Stoke Mandeville on March 11 after suffering bleeding.
But Wycombe's special care baby unit was full and she said: "Eight hours after an ambulance transfer was requested the paramedics arrived."
The ride in a "bone shaker" ambulance was not much better, she said. "It was 40 minutes of hell."
The rattling ambulance meant the midwife could not hear the baby's heartbeat, she said: "If anything had happened they wouldn't have known about it."
"If I had haemorrhaged, my little girl would have died. It was very distressing."
The housewife, who has another daughter, Isabelle, with husband Simon, 33, gave birth to Evie by caesarean section the next day.
Although this meant Mrs Hallas, of Green Close, High Wycombe could stay in hospital she said some mums face having to return home miles away.
She said: "A lot of mums I spoke to in Wycombe couldn't drive. What are they going to do?"
Establishing breast-feeding would be "impossible" she said.
"It is going to break families up. If mums get post-natal depression it is going to cost the NHS more. I don't think they realise the ramifications of it."
Buckinghamshire Hospitals NHS Trust spokesman Jon Fisher said parents at Stoke Mandeville would get a bed to be with their child should it need special care.
A bigger maternity unit at the hospital would reduce the number of transfers to other hospitals, he said.
He added: "Partners, relatives and visitors may wish to use our free shuttle service between the hospitals should this be of use. The service runs frequently throughout the day, from early morning to late in the evening."
cowleywebley, H/W says...
6:28pm Thu 15 May 08
Ivor, says...
8:04pm Thu 15 May 08
The mum-of-five feared for her unborn daughter's life during a 40 minute "drive of hell" to Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury.Its disgraceful to think that patients have to travel to Stoke Mandeville when Wycombe Hospital is on their doorstep.
SBJones, Wycombe says...
10:01pm Thu 15 May 08
Pip, high wycombe says...
7:52pm Fri 16 May 08
abbie barszcz, loudwater says...
10:54pm Fri 20 Jun 08
Add your comment
Register for a FREE Bucks Free Press account and you can have your say on today's news and sport by adding comments on articles we publish. The best comments may even get published in the paper.
Please register now or sign in below to continue.
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Find a job in High Wycombe and all around Buckinghamshire.
Search Now »
Make a date in High Wycombe and Buckinghamshire now!
Search Now »
Search for properties all over High Wycombe and across the UK.
Search Now »
Find used vehicles for sale in High Wycombe and all over Buckinghamshire
Search Now »
cowleywebley, H/W says...
6:26pm Thu 15 May 08
& receive sub standard treatment.