46. Rosie Murphy - addressing health inequalities in maternity
Manage episode 424658322 series 2981270
Rosie Murphy is a midwife doing fantastic work around health inequalities, including the coproduction workshop we co-led in Croydon.
Our conversation builds on Episode 45 with Noreen Bukhari. I hope Rosie and Noreen will connect and exchange notes on their excellent work in Coventry and Croydon, supporting women from black and ethnic minority communities.
I met and became friends with Rosie through her prestigious Darzi fellowship – Rosie's work was rated as exceptional.
Lemon lightbulbs 🍋💡🍋
- Racism is not just about shouting expletives - it is complex
- We all have unconscious bias
- There is unwillingness to acknowledge systemic racism
- UK institutions are largely built around the needs and understandings of white middle class men
- We need to be culturally aware to understand what matters to people
- Whose Shoes uses imaginative ways to listen to ALL voices
- Trust, being listened to, being taken seriously MATTER
- Education, socio-economic status, ethnicity, body, size affect how likely to be taken seriously
- There is mistrust and distrust of the NHS/ maternity services among some groups
- Maternity services are difficult to navigate!
- The NHS doesn’t need to fix all problems itself
- Use informal communication channels that people trust - hairdressers!
- Social deprivation has many impacts – services need to flex more
- White allyship includes owning our own biases
- Call people in, not call them out
- Lived and learned experience - work TOGETHER for safety of mother and baby
- Women who've had a negative experience find it harder to speak out next time
- HEARD campaign, Croydon – Health, Equity And Racial Disparity
- Find simple ways to show women they are being taken seriously
- Creative ways for people to feedback
- Croydon BME Forum / Asian Resource Centre reach people in imaginative ways - eg community healthcare drop-in session
- Share the learning eg infographics, blogs, Steller Stories , Sway reports
- Connect and learn from others
Links and resources
- Rosie's blogs: Partnering with minoritised women and birthing people to improve maternal and perinatal outcomes: a Darzi journey - Health Innovation Network
- Film - Highly acclaimed Whose Shoes event in Croydon, focusing on health inequalities affecting women and families from Black, Asian and ethnic minority communities
- Gill Phillips' presentation at ‘Birthing with colour’ Nov 2020 -championed by Lewisham and Greenwich maternity team
- Nobody's Patient' project
- Family Integrated Care report
- The Obs Pod - CQC Maternity Survey 2022
- Gill Phillips' article Patient Experience Library, Jan 2023 capturing 'Whose Shoes' tips and lemon lightbulbs.
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Розділи
1. 46. Rosie Murphy - addressing health inequalities in maternity (00:00:00)
2. Connecting people working in this space - Noreen Bukhari (episode 45) and Rosie Murphy! (00:00:46)
3. Rosie's journey - becoming a midwife and strong advocate of women's rights (00:02:41)
4. Rosie's Darzi Fellowship challenge - addressing race-based health inequalities (00:05:08)
5. Disparities in maternal mortality - a growing awareness (00:06:22)
6. A fear of 'naming the problem' - unwillingness to acknowledge systemic racism as a factor (00:08:40)
7. Racism is not just about shouting expletives - it is more complex. Unconscious bias. (00:10:00)
8. UK institutions are largely built around the needs and understandings of white middle class men (00:10:59)
9. There is more than one perspective - using Whose Shoes to hear ALL voices and make change (00:11:23)
10. Virtual Whose Shoes during the pandemic (00:11:56)
11. An infographic brought a breakthrough - the disparity in maternal mortality gained traction! (00:13:20)
12. We need to be MUCH more culturally aware to understand what matters to people (00:14:37)
13. Speaking up. White allyship - what does it take? (00:17:50)
14. Recognising and addressing our own prejudices; showing vulnerablity (00:19:47)
15. Nova Reid - 'calling people in, not calling them out' (00:20:55)
16. A practical example of unconscious bias - not just race, any deep-help belief that has no basis in fact (00:22:50)
17. Social deprivation – how we need to be more aware of the impact and make appropriate adjustments (00:26:24)
18. Deep distrust and mistrust of the NHS and of maternity services in particular - we need to recognise this to find ways to help people build trust and engage (00:31:00)
19. Trust, being listening to, being taken seriously - CENTRAL themes to all our Whose Shoes work (00:35:54)
20. The recent ObsPod podcast on the CQC maternity survey talks about a decline in the proportion of women thinking their concerns were listened to and taken seriously (00:37:05)
21. Education, socio-economic status, ethnicity, body, size +++ affect how likely you are to be taken seriously! (00:38:03)
22. Lived and learned experience need to be valued, and everyone work TOGETHER for the safety of mother and baby (00:39:37)
23. If women have had a negative experience (not being listened to) it will become harder to speak out next time (00:41:10)
24. The HEARD campaign in Croydon – Health, Equity And Racial Disparity (00:42:25)
25. Simple, practical ways of supporting women who feel they are not being taken seriously (00:43:34)
26. Blind spots. Invisible. How do we reach people who don’t reply to surveys? (00:46:02)
27. We need to create more channels for people to feedback. We need to understand why they feel that nothing will change as a result of their feedback. (00:49:24)
28. Using the power of community and trusted relationships within the community. Hairdressers and more. (00:50:10)
29. As Noreen Bukhari says (Episode 45) trust takes a long time to build! (00:52:05)
30. Community First! The NHS doesn’t need to fix all the problems – it needs to reach out and work with the community (00:53:37)
31. Use informal communication channels, that people trust! (00:56:10)
32. Maternity services are difficult to navigate! (00:56:39)
33. Shoutout to the Croydon BME Forum and the Asian Resource Centre! (01:00:11)
34. A community healthcare, drop-in session, reaching people in more imaginative ways (01:00:43)
35. Dissemination! Finding imaginative ways to share the learning from Rosie’s Darzi Fellowship to benefit busy healthcare professionals (01:02:48)
36. Blogs, Steller Stories , Sway reports all have a place – as well as the formal, 10,000 word academic paper! (01:04:30)
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