Access to and engagement with healthcare services among women with Children’s Social Care involvement during the perinatal period who subsequently died : a confidential enquiry

De Backer, Kaat and Rose, Emma and Bull, Caroline and Labisi, Oluwaseun and Felker, Allison Marjorie and Kitchen, Kirsty and Mason, Claire and Montgomery, Elsa and Sandall, Jane and Easter, Abigail and Knight, Marian and Vousden, Nicola (2026) Access to and engagement with healthcare services among women with Children’s Social Care involvement during the perinatal period who subsequently died : a confidential enquiry. BMJ Public Health, 4 (2): e003171. ISSN 2753-4294

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Abstract

Introduction: In the last decade, UK maternal death surveillance data have shown that among the women who died during pregnancy and the year after birth (the perinatal period), the proportion of women with Children’s Social Care (CSC) involvement nearly doubled. Parental non-engagement in the context of CSC involvement has been described as a particular professional concern. Objective: To explore organisational and system barriers when accessing and engaging with healthcare services experienced by women with CSC involvement who subsequently died during the perinatal period. Methods: MBRRACE-UK national surveillance data were used to identify women who died during or in the year after pregnancy in the UK between 2014 and 2021 and who had CSC involvement. A confidential enquiry of healthcare records of a random sample of women with CSC involvement during pregnancy or in the year after the end of pregnancy and who subsequently died (n=47) was undertaken to explore barriers to care. Results: We identified four themes to describe the barriers faced by women with CSC involvement when accessing and engaging with healthcare services in the perinatal period: (1) burden of care, (2) disruption of care, (3) follow-up of non-attendance and (4) bias in care. Our findings highlighted the additional challenges that women had to contend with, while already facing multiple adversities in their daily lives. Conclusion: Our confidential enquiry found that the existing narrative of non-engagement among women with CSC involvement is unfounded for most women. Care for women with CSC involvement needs to be made trauma-informed, accessible and minimally disruptive.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
BMJ Public Health
Subjects:
?? sociodemographic factorshealth services accessibilitypublic healthfemale ??
ID Code:
236695
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
21 Apr 2026 21:45
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
21 Apr 2026 21:45