6.3 C
London
Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Midwife put ‘blue and floppy’ newborn on mother’s chest

A midwife placed a ‘blue and floppy’ newborn on her mother’s chest and said ‘there’s your baby’ after midwives encouraged her to deliver her child at home, an inquest heard. 

Poppy Hope Lomas died aged seven days old after she was rushed to hospital following complications during a planned home delivery with the Edgware Midwives home birth team.

Barnet Coroner’s Court heard Gemma Lomas was not properly consulted about the risks surrounding the natural delivery of her second child, having delivered her first daughter Willow via caesarean section.

Ms Lomas described how midwives were slow to react when Poppy was born ‘blue and floppy’. Doctors from University College Hospital in London later discovered the baby girl had been ‘starved of oxygen’ for ‘around seven to eight minutes’.

In a witness statement read out by her lawyer Teresa Hargreaves, Ms Lomas said: ‘The midwife placed Poppy on my chest and said, “There’s your baby.”

‘Poppy was blue and floppy. There was blood coming out of her mouth and her head fell back. That’s a horrific memory that sticks in my mind, being handed my dead baby.

‘I said “there’s something wrong” but the midwives moved very slowly, there was no sense of urgency.’

The inquest heard Alice Boardman, who was head midwife at Edgware Midwives, had encouraged a vaginal birth after caesarean (VBAC) at home but failed to explain the potential risks. 

Poppy Hope Lomas was placed on her mother Gemma Lomas's chest 'blue and floppy', as midwives said 'there's your baby'

Poppy Hope Lomas died aged seven days old after being rushed to hospital following complications during a planned home delivery with the Edgware Midwives home birth team

In her statement, Ms Lomas said: ‘I immediately trusted Alice. She was young and I felt like she was really advocating for me. She was very upbeat and said: “Let’s go for this.”

‘VBACs were something they did every day. She said they’d just delivered a lady with a VBAC with twins.

‘She said that, because of my previous C-section, I’d have to “jump through a few hoops” and speak to their consultant.

‘I was very much led to believe that the conversation I’d be having with their consultant was just a tick box exercise and there was no good reason I could not have a VBAC at home.’

VBAC deliveries should take place in a ‘suitably staffed and equipped delivery suite’ and ‘with resources available for immediate caesarean delivery’, according to guidance from Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG).

Poppy was rushed to hospital after the midwives, who are the designated home birth team at Barnet Hospital, told Mr Lomas to ring 999. 

After the Poppy’s brain was scanned, Dr Giles Kendall, a consultant neonatologist, described the scan as ‘one of the worst that he’d seen in his career’, according to Ms Lomas’s statement. 

Dr Kendall believed Poppy had been ‘starved of oxygen for a long time’, Ms Lomas said, while Ms Boardman estimated it to be around seven to eight minutes. 

Doctors from University College Hospital in London later discovered the baby girl had been 'starved of oxygen' for 'around seven to eight minutes'

Ms Lomas said: ‘I still don’t understand how she was without oxygen for so long when the midwives were supposedly monitoring her heart rate.’

Poppy, who had been a healthy baby throughout the pregnancy, died aged seven days old when her breathing tube was removed. Ms Lomas said: ‘That was the worst week of our lives. We knew she wasn’t going to make it.’

The inquest, led by senior coroner Andrew Walker, heard midwives also dismissed Ms Lomas’s complaints of pain from her previous C-section scar, including Ms Boardman. 

Ms Lomas said: ‘I complained my scar was hurting. It was tight and was starting to really hurt. It felt like it was stretching rather than ripping. 

‘I remember saying that it really hurt when she was pushing the Doppler (a handheld ultrasound device used to monitor a baby’s heart rate) hard against my stomach and asking her to stop.

‘She said: “I need to do this, it’s important.”‘

RCOG guidance states practitioners should be cautious managing deliveries involving uterine scars, as there is a one in 200 risk of uterine rupture. 

Ms Lomas said losing Poppy was even harder to deal with as the baby had been healthy during pregnancy. 

She said: ‘She was perfectly fine inside me. She had no defects or problems. It was just those final moments of her birth.

‘That makes her loss even harder to deal with. The fact that it all happened in our home, a place where we should feel safe, has also made the trauma so much worse.’

Edgware Midwives is the designated home birth team at Barnet Hospital, which is part of the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust. 

The Daily Mail has contacted Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust for comment.  

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

Prince Philip’s nickname only his nearest and dearest could call him

From 'Lillibet' to 'Grandpa Wales', members of the Royal Family are known to go by many nicknames.

King’s moving tribute to late Queen on her birthday

Charles, 77, praised the way in which the late monarch was so 'constant, steadfast and wholly devoted to the people she served as she lived though a near-century of remarkable change.

Asian ‘grooming gang’ trafficked and raped teenage girls, court hears

They were pressured by the four men in a seaside town into providing sexual services in exchange for cannabis and cocaine, it is alleged.

Iran peace talks on a knife edge as Trump refuses to end blockade

Tehran has also said it is 'prepared for military confrontation' and will 'punish the US' if the President fails to pause his naval siege and enter talks.

Brazilian beauty queen dies aged 31 after suffering a heart attack

Maiara Cristina de Lima Fiel was due to compete in a beauty pageant next week before she suffered the medical emergency.

Flight prices soaring – but package holidays £100 cheaper than 2025

Package holidays are defying rising inflation - with breaks even cheaper than last year - despite the hike in prices seen by Brits booking flights.

King’s moving tribute to late Queen on her birthday

Charles, 77, praised the way in which the late monarch was so 'constant, steadfast and wholly devoted to the people she served as she lived though a near-century of remarkable change.

Asian ‘grooming gang’ trafficked and raped teenage girls, court hears

They were pressured by the four men in a seaside town into providing sexual services in exchange for cannabis and cocaine, it is alleged.

I loved to wind down with a couple of glasses of wine every night…

'Your blood tests are back and they're showing your liver is under stress,' my GP told me. 'A lot of stress. In fact, you've got fatty liver disease.'
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img