Delivering Better

DELIVERING BETTER

Delivering Better dives into the real stories of birth, motherhood, and maternity care in the UK. Co-founders Sarah, Sophie, and Jo share their own experiences, tackle systemic challenges, and bring in experts and birthing people to explore what works, what doesn’t, and how care can truly improve. From frontline voices to women challenging a broken system, we cover it all - how we got here, what’s broken, and where we need to go.

Episodes

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Megan Rossiter on Birth Power, Trusting Women & How Maternity Care Lost Its Way

    How did birth become something done to women, instead of centred around them? Birth educator Meghan Rossiter joins us to talk about power, patriarchy, trust and why maternity care still isn’t built around birthing people. *TW* THIS PODCAST DOES CONTAIN STORIES OF BIRTH TRAUMA. Join the campaign and sign our open letter here: https://deliveringbetter.org/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deliveringbetter/ Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@deliveringbetter00:00 Welcome and introducing Megan Rossiter00:00 How Birth Ed began00:01 Birth Power and reclaiming autonomy00:03 How did maternity care lose its way?00:04 How birth became medicalised00:05 The history of harm in maternity care00:08 How women are shaped before they enter the system00:11 Twilight sleep and the loss of birth wisdom00:13 What women are missing from birth education00:16 Birth as power, autonomy and understanding00:18 Why support matters wherever you give birth00:21 Why continuity of care saves money and improves outcomes00:24 What antenatal appointments don’t give women00:27 Why maternity care is still designed around the system00:30 Why government still doesn’t treat this as a priority00:37 Talking about birth on social media without feeding fear00:40 Different campaigners, shared goals00:44 Why “everybody is born” should settle the argument00:49 The Beauty Spot: women need to be trusted in birth

    52 min
  2. 29 APR

    2 Illiyin Morrison on the 3★ Birth Experience, Fact vs Feeling & Cultural Competence in Care

    What happens when birth trauma is minimised - or never properly heard at all? Perinatal trauma specialist Illiyin Morrison joins us to talk about debriefing birth, agency, racism in maternity care and what real support looks like. TW* THIS PODCAST DOES CONTAIN STORIES OF BIRTH TRAUMA. Join the campaign and sign our open letter here: https://deliveringbetter.org/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deliveringbetter/ Follow us on TIktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@deliveringbetter?_r=1&_t=ZN-95igNrJuYvm 00:00 Welcome and introducing Illiyin Morrison00:02 Why Illiyin stepped away from midwifery00:03 Pregnancy, home birth plans and consultant dismissal00:05 From planned home birth to emergency caesarean00:06 The moment Illiyin knew she had to leave midwifery00:10 How birth debriefing became her work00:11 What a trauma-informed birth debrief actually looks like00:13 Why clinical notes don’t tell the whole story00:15 Why women need their own words for birth00:17 Hospital reflections, trust and being retraumatised00:20 Why many debriefs stop too early00:21 Are birth reflections protecting women — or the system?00:24 Why positive births can feel hard to talk about too00:26 Home birth after caesarean and making informed choices00:32 “You birth well when you have agency”00:35 Home birth stereotypes and misunderstanding women’s choices00:37 Black women’s experiences in maternity care00:39 Why better care for Black women improves care for everyone00:40 The systemic roots of racial inequality in maternity care00:44 Why maternity care can’t be fixed in isolation00:47 Maternity, matriarchy and building a better future00:49 The Beauty Spot: legacy, motherhood and impact

    53 min
5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Delivering Better dives into the real stories of birth, motherhood, and maternity care in the UK. Co-founders Sarah, Sophie, and Jo share their own experiences, tackle systemic challenges, and bring in experts and birthing people to explore what works, what doesn’t, and how care can truly improve. From frontline voices to women challenging a broken system, we cover it all - how we got here, what’s broken, and where we need to go.

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