"In the 21st century, no woman should have to give her life to give life."
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon ( Reuters 19 May)
"We must find a way to get maternal mortality recognized as a key indicator of a functioning health system. Let us work together to make sure maternal mortality is a …
I'm not just blogging blindly; I'm interested in what other people think and say, and I also am interested in how people find this website, and where people are linking to it.
I watch referring sites in my log stats, and often visit back. It was in this way that I came across a parenting forum …
Maternal death is too uncomfortable a topic for discussion.
Please discuss in the comments.
…
What a sorry state that we are being let down even before we are born. We have excellent midwives in this country, but give them a chance - there simply aren't enough.
BBC: Maternity units 'shut to mothers'
…
Tonight our long summer holidays end. We've had an amazing time, visiting Scotland and Portugal, enjoying glorious sunshine in both, but tomorrow all three of us start again at school. I go back in my working capacity in I.T., Harry returns now in Upper School and Emily joins us for her first day …
Four years ago today, a good mother died unnecessarily from an archaic illness. The world may not have noticed immediately, but the three year old boy crying in his bed, the six day old girl feeding in her father's arms and the grieving widower did.
Together the three of us have kicked, …
Since the launch of Friday's Child and last weekend's coverage I have been flooded with comments, emails, letters and calls. It is so moving and rewarding to receive them all, and I may be slow but I am getting up to date with replying.
Trying to keep up makes me think that I am not giving a …
Yesterday's extract of Friday's Child in the Daily Mail caused a huge response, which still stuns me this morning.
To everyone who has contacted me: Thank you. I am replying as fast as I can!
The extract was from my book Friday's Child which is the story of what happened back then. Today …
… 'Childbed Fever? It's what Mummy died of. It's an infection that can kill you after you have a baby.'
'Why Daddy? Why did God want Mummy to die? He controls everything, so he shouldn't have let her die.'
I wish I knew all the answers, like Harry expects me to.
For as long as I can remember now, my work place at home has been the end of the kitchen table rather than my desk in the upstairs study. Working with my computer at the table has had its advantages - I am either in the same or the next door room to Harry and Emily when they play.
The trouble …