In the United Kingdom, hospitals are under-funded and under-staffed.
A father was ****** to deliver his own baby in a maternity ward after the midwife abandoned them. Thomas Howard, 33, frantically pressed the emergency buzzer to alert staff at the Royal Blackburn Hospital, Lancashire, for help when he realized the newborn's arrival was imminent. But when no one at the maternity suite arrived to deliver the baby, he had to act. Father-of-five Mr Howard said by the time the midwife had returned, his partner Emily Baron had already given birth.
Emily, 26, had been taken to hospital after going into labour. After arranging for family members to look after their other children, Thomas arrived half an hour later and noticed Emily was losing blood. 'When I asked the midwife if this was normal she said she didn't know, which didn't fill me with confidence at all,' said Mr Howard.
'She then went away, leaving me and Emily on our own. It was then I noticed the baby's head coming through. I pressed the buzzer to get some assistance, but nobody came and I decided that I would have to step in. 'I have never done anything like it before, but I've seen others do it a few times, so I had a rough idea. 'The baby was lying at the end of the bed between Emily's legs and I was cleaning the mucous out of her mouth and making sure she could breathe when the midwife came back in.
'I was in shock at what had happened but the nurse didn't say anything to me. She just carried on as if it was normal.'
Read more: Mail Online
A father was ****** to deliver his own baby in a maternity ward after the midwife abandoned them. Thomas Howard, 33, frantically pressed the emergency buzzer to alert staff at the Royal Blackburn Hospital, Lancashire, for help when he realized the newborn's arrival was imminent. But when no one at the maternity suite arrived to deliver the baby, he had to act. Father-of-five Mr Howard said by the time the midwife had returned, his partner Emily Baron had already given birth.
Emily, 26, had been taken to hospital after going into labour. After arranging for family members to look after their other children, Thomas arrived half an hour later and noticed Emily was losing blood. 'When I asked the midwife if this was normal she said she didn't know, which didn't fill me with confidence at all,' said Mr Howard.
'She then went away, leaving me and Emily on our own. It was then I noticed the baby's head coming through. I pressed the buzzer to get some assistance, but nobody came and I decided that I would have to step in. 'I have never done anything like it before, but I've seen others do it a few times, so I had a rough idea. 'The baby was lying at the end of the bed between Emily's legs and I was cleaning the mucous out of her mouth and making sure she could breathe when the midwife came back in.
'I was in shock at what had happened but the nurse didn't say anything to me. She just carried on as if it was normal.'
Read more: Mail Online