Expectant mothers once tuned into Channel 4’s ‘One Born Every Minute’ for reassurance about labor wards. The series showcased compassionate midwives supporting families through challenging births. Now, as a new series launches at Saint Mary’s Hospital in Manchester, bereaved parents and campaigners condemn the timing amid widespread NHS maternity failures.
Bereaved Mother’s Tragic Experience at Leeds Hospital
Fiona Winser-Ramm delivered her daughter Aliona at Leeds General Infirmary in 2020, a site featured in earlier seasons of the show. Aliona lived only 27 minutes due to midwife neglect and basic care failures, as ruled by the coroner. Fiona and her husband Daniel chose the hospital partly because of its portrayal on the series and positive ratings.
“How wrong I was,” Fiona states. Midwives overlooked reduced fetal movements and possible waters breaking, delayed doctor escalation, and falsified records claiming concerns were shared. After a 72-hour labor, Aliona’s injuries proved fatal.
Fiona now campaigns for reform, contributing to a government inquiry led by senior midwife Donna Ockenden. Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust faces scrutiny in the National Maternity and Neonatal Investigation overseen by Baroness Amos.
Another Loss Highlights Care Shortcomings
Angela Welsh lost her son Kion at full term in Leeds during 2011 filming. Midwives sent her home after her placenta failed, forcing a normal birth days later without a C-section option. Placed on the labor ward amid live births, she received no counseling, just a leaflet.
“I was treated awfully with no compassion,” Angela recalls. One midwife suggested refrigerating her baby, and cleaners entered against her wishes. Angela saw that midwife accept a Bafta award soon after, while grieving at home.
“The show is staged and only shows what they want,” she says. “It’s disgusting to revive it now during public inquiries.”
Widespread Maternity Crisis in the UK
Nationally, inquiries reveal preventable baby deaths, maternal harm, systemic racism, negligent care, and cover-ups. Donna Ockenden reviews services in Nottingham and Sussex. Maternal deaths hit a 20-year high despite fewer births, with black women three times more likely to die in childbirth. Midwifery training faces overhaul amid a staffing emergency.
The National Maternity and Neonatal Investigation’s interim report notes structural racism, poor staff relations, and lack of compassion. Baroness Amos states that services fail too many women, babies, and families.
Concerns at New Filming Site
Sources report senior staff at Saint Mary’s attempting to influence portrayals by discouraging junior midwives from participating. A 2023 Care Quality Commission inspection flagged insufficient skilled staff. Chief Nursing Officer Kimberley Salmon-Jamieson affirms improvements and welcomes re-inspection.
Campaigners warn the show’s positive focus misleads viewers. Fiona argues it portrays universal outstanding care, ignoring that 65% of services rate inadequate with racism issues. “It could cause significant harm,” she says.
Bereaved families demand documentaries on scandals, not feel-good stories. One mother suggests renaming it “One killed every 11 hours” to reflect realities.
Channel 4’s Response
Channel 4 emphasizes the series as observational, not investigative. Senior Commissioning Editor Vivienne Molokwu highlights emotional journeys in the digital age. Producer Will Rowson notes changes in maternity care. The broadcaster references its news coverage of inquiries and retains editorial control.
Families urge Channel 4 to consult affected groups for a fuller picture of 2026 NHS maternity realities.

