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/ Maternity Negligence Claims Under Scrutiny: Are Families Being Shortchanged?

Maternity Negligence Claims Under Scrutiny: Are Families Being Shortchanged?

Recent coverage has once again brought the cost of clinical negligence claims into focus, with maternity negligence claims representing a significant proportion of NHS liabilities. While this is often presented as a financial challenge, it is important not to lose sight of what these claims represent, families facing the consequences of serious, and often avoidable, harm.

Why Maternity Negligence Claims Are So High Value

Maternity negligence cases are, by their nature, high value. Where failures in care result in stillbirth, neonatal death or life-changing injury, compensation must reflect the lifelong needs of those affected. This is not about excess — it is about ensuring that families are properly supported where care has fallen below an acceptable standard.

In many cases, this overlaps with the wider issues seen in birth injury claims and birth trauma claims, where the impact on a child and family can be profound and long term.

Are Families Being Properly Compensated After Birth Injury or Birth Trauma?

What is less frequently acknowledged is how limited certain aspects of the system already are. Bereavement damages remain fixed at a relatively modest level and are only available to a narrow category of claimants. For many families, this does not begin to reflect the reality of their loss.

Where medical negligence in childbirth has caused avoidable harm, the legal system must ensure that compensation reflects the true scale of that harm, including the need for ongoing support and traumatic birth compensation where appropriate.

How Clinical Negligence Claims Can Improve Maternity Safety

It is also important to recognise the role that clinical negligence claims play in driving improvements in patient safety. Through the legal process, recurring issues — whether in monitoring, communication or escalation — are brought to light. For many clients, accountability and the prevention of future harm are as important as financial compensation.

Reform Must Not Restrict Access to Justice for Families

As discussions around reform continue, any changes must be approached with care. Reducing the cost of claims by restricting access to justice or limiting compensation risks shifting the burden away from those responsible and onto families.

A balanced approach is essential — one that supports learning and prevention, while ensuring that those affected by negligent care are treated fairly.

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