This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) has called on the Welsh government to do more to encourage students to take up the profession, warning that the region could face a midwife shortage as many midwives look to retire.
According to the RCM, 35 per cent of midwives working in the NHS are now in their 50s and 60s, while an increasing number of babies are being born to women in their 40s.
In its annual State of Maternity Services, the RCM warned that the age profile of mothers is changing, with older mothers, who more likely to experience complications during pregnancy and birth, becoming more commonplace.
Cathy Warwick, RCM CEO, explained: “Almost 1,100 NHS midwives in England are in their sixties, and overall a third of midwives in England are in their fifties or sixties. And it is not just a challenge facing the health service in England; in fact, the situation is more pronounced in the other parts of the UK.
“In Wales, just over a third of midwives (35 per cent) are aged at least 50. In Northern Ireland, it is two midwives in every five (40 per cent). And Scotland is the part of the UK with the largest proportion in their fifties or sixties: 1,432 midwives and maternity care assistants there are in this age bracket, making up 41 per cent of the workforce.”
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
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