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COVID Babies

How Pandemic Health Measures Undermined Pregnancy, Birth, and Early Parenting

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COVID Babies

By: Amy Brown
Narrated by: Alice Allan
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About this listen

As the COVID-19 pandemic took hold, pregnancy and maternity services underwent a rapid transformation in an attempt to deal with transmission of the virus and the growing pressure on healthcare services. In a climate of fear, and with many unknowns about the virus and the risks to pregnant women and their babies, restrictions and hastily implemented policies often overrode years of work to improve maternity care, with devastating consequences for new families.

COVID Babies: How Pandemic Health Measures Undermined Pregnancy, Birth, and Early Parenting considers how policies put in place to protect us from the immediate threat of the virus ultimately had the unintended consequence of harming many who needed maternity and postnatal care. It highlights how hard-won gains, even when supported by overwhelming evidence, can be lost at the drop of a hat in a crisis.

By learning the lessons of the pandemic - through close examination of the evidence base that is now emerging - Amy Brown shows how we can begin to move forward and unravel what has gone wrong. This is no easy task when our health services continue to face significant challenges, but one that is necessary to ensure the health and well-being of our new families and those who care for them.

©2021 Pinter and Martin (P)2021 Pinter and Martin
Physical Illness & Disease Sexual & Reproductive Health Pregnancy Sexual Health Health

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All stars
Most relevant  
Depressingly accurate. The changes to care in the pandemic need to be learnt from. The bit about the risk of harm being less than the actual harm of massively reducing essential services really resonated.

So important

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Really interesting, but not enough focus on those parents who already had small babies when lockdown began.

Very much focussed on pregnancy and younger babies

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Thank you for this book. It helped validate a lot of the feelings I had around lockdown and the neglect of both new families, young children and mental health when considering policies to prevent the spread of covid. As a mental health professional who had a baby during lockdown I really feel that the mental health costs were not considered and a lot of trauma has resulted. I hope this book has contributed towards my healing from this time, although hearing some of it was quite triggering.

I think the human side of the stories of mothers and new families shone through but I have given it 4 stars rather than 5 as it was very heavy on the statistics. I know that stating the evidence base is important but at some points in the book it was just listing stats from research.

A very important book

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