6 hours ago

Maternity inquiry chair named in government U-turn

Divya Talwarand

Natalie Truswell,BBC News Investigations

BBC Image of Donna Ockenden. She has blonde hair and is wearing a pink and red dress and is smiling. BBC

Donna Ockenden will lead the review

The health secretary has made a U-turn over who will lead an independent inquiry into "repeated maternity failures" at an NHS trust.

Wes Streeting has appointed Donna Ockenden, following a campaign by bereaved and harmed families, to lead the review into maternity and neonatal services at Leeds Teaching Hospitals (LTH) NHS Trust.

PA Media Wes Streeting, a man with short dark hair and blue eyes wearing a blue suit, shirt and red tie, looks to the left of the framePA Media

Health Secretary Wes Streeting met families who had been affected by maternity failures at the trust multiple times

Streeting first announced the inquiry into the West Yorkshire trust in October 2025, saying it was required to understand what had "gone so catastrophically wrong" at the maternity units at Leeds General Infirmary and St James's University Hospital.

Days later in a BBC radio interview, Streeting announced that Ockenden would not be the chair of the Leeds review.

In February, families and MPs urged Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer to "intervene and appoint" the senior midwife immediately to head the Leeds inquiry.

MARTIN MCQUADE/BBC A couple stand next to each other with serious expressions. The light shines through the window behind them. MARTIN MCQUADE/BBC

Amarjit Kaur and Mandip Singh Matharoo's daughter Asees was stillborn in January 2024

Amarjit Kaur Matharoo, whose daughter Asees was stillborn in January 2024, said they are "relieved".

"It had been a really exhausting, long road to get to a point where we've got a chair that we all agree upon, is going to be completely independent," she said.

Streeting said they had "reached the right decision".

"I am sorry to families in Leeds for what they've been through and the fact that so often they've had to really fight to get to this point," he said.

Lauren Caulfield, whose daughter was stillborn in March 2022, said they have "fought" for this review.

"The announcement is coming 10 days before Grace's 4th birthday, and I feel this is the best gift I could give her, ensuring her little life is actually going to make a change," she said.

People stood outside Downing Street holding a long line of baby grows.

Families, including Fiona Winser-Ramm and Dan Ramm, at Downing Street, hold up baby grows to represent the number of babies' lives lost over the last five years, which may have been avoidable

Ockenden said she "commends the secretary of state" for "making the right decision from the families' perspective".

"Families have been very clear for a very long time that their request was for me to chair their independent maternity services at Leeds.

"They have met with the secretary of state on a number of occasions, and in the last meeting that I believe went on for several hours... he listened very carefully and came back to them and said 'actually this is the right decision'.

"So I am pleased with that but I do recognise, as we all will, that it has taken a very long time to get to here today," she said.

Family handout/PA Wire Three women stand side-by-side with serious expressions on their faces. The woman on the left wears a dark top, has black-rimmed glasses and long brown curled hair; the woman in the centre wears a silver necklace over a pink jumper and has long tightly curled brown hair, and the woman on the right has a white top, and straight blonde hair worn with a plait. Family handout/PA Wire

Bereaved mothers Amarjit Matharoo, Lauren Caulfield and Fiona Winser-Ramm have campaigned for years for an independent inquiry chaired by Donna Ockenden

Although the full terms of reference for the review are yet to be agreed, the government said it expected it "to involve case reviews of stillbirths, neonatal deaths and serious injuries, hypoxic injuries and maternal deaths" between 1 January 2011 and 31 December 2025.

The review will operate on an opt-out basis, with cases that meet the terms of reference automatically included unless families choose otherwise. Clinical case reviews are expected to begin in August.

Fiona Winser-Ramm, whose daughter Aliona Grace died in 2020, said: "We are calling on all those who have been harmed, or whose babies have been harmed, to reach out and engage with the review.

"Whether it was 11 years ago or 11 months ago, your experience matters. Your baby's life and wellbeing matters, as does yours."

The BBC's original investigation featured testimony from whistleblowers who claimed the maternity units were unsafe, despite being rated "good" at the time by the body responsible for inspecting NHS hospitals, the Care Quality Commission (CQC).

The maternity units were downgraded by the CQC to "inadequate" in June 2025, after unannounced inspections raised concerns that women and babies were "at risk of avoidable harm".

Inspectors also highlighted a "blame culture" at the trust, which resulted in staff being reluctant to raise concerns and incidents.

PA Media A general view of Leeds General Infirmary hospital. Members of the public walk up the path to the main building. A blue and white NHS sign stands in the foreground.PA Media

Brendan Brown of Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust said it was "committed to working openly, honestly and transparently with Donna Ockenden and the review team"

In a statement Brendan Brown, Chief Executive of LTH NHS Trust, apologised to families whose babies died or were harmed, and said they welcomed the announcement of a chair being appointed.

"We are absolutely committed to working openly, honestly and transparently with Donna Ockenden and the review team, and with families who have used our services", Brown said.

"I would also like to reassure families in Leeds who will be using our services currently, that significant improvements are already under way in our maternity and neonatal services, following reviews by the Care Quality Commission and NHS England," he added.

In a statement, the health secretary also said Ockenden was an "outstanding advocate for families whose voices haven't always been heard" and that "her leadership will bring us closer to lasting change so desperately needed in Leeds".

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