COVID surge hits maternity wards,expectant mothers face delays

Expectant mothers are facing repeated delays to planned caesareans and birth inductions as oversubscribed maternity wards battle diminishing staffing levels and a surge in COVID-positive women giving birth.

Obstetrician Nisha Khot,who works at two major Melbourne hospitals,says the whole system has been under strain during the pandemic,but demand in maternity wards has ramped up again in recent months.

Ella Chorazy is about to have her first baby.

Ella Chorazy is about to have her first baby.Scott McNaughton

Khot estimates there has been a 20 to 25 per cent increase in the number of expectant mothers testing positive for COVID-19 when they arrive at hospitals to give birth. Maternity wards are also grappling with midwife shortages of up to 30 per cent on any given day as rising numbers of staff are infected with respiratory illnesses.

“We are struggling with staffing the wards,” Khot said. “We have midwives and doctors who are off sick because of COVID-19 or because of all the other viruses that are going around.

“The other side,of course,is that women are still having babies and women are getting sick and if they get sick that they’re in hospital for longer.”

Ella Chorazy is due to give birth to her first child at the Royal Women’s Hospital in early August,just as the peak of the latest coronavirus wave is forecast to crash over the healthcare system.

The 35-year-old university academic said while she could not wait to hold her baby for the first time,the past few weeks of her pregnancy had been tinged with apprehension.

At the beginning of the pandemic,Chorazy said she would have been most worried about being infected with coronavirus. Now,she is triple vaccinated,but concerned about hospital staffing shortages.

“I have been quite calm throughout the pregnancy,but now am a little bit anxious and thinking things like ‘what if I go into labour,and there’s not enough staff? What if something goes wrong?’” she said.

“I am the sort of person that inherently trusts our hospital system to be able to provide for me if I’m in need and I have so much empathy for the healthcare workers are facing.

“But I also rationally know that they are experiencing huge staffing shortages as a result of pressures associated with COVID,so the anxiety of something going wrong is in the back of my mind.”

Khot said women who were infected withthe latest Omicron subvariant did not generally require hospitalisation due to the virus and appeared to be showing milder symptoms.

“Although there has been an uptick in the number of cases,the cases have been relatively mild. The vaccination rates are quite high,which also is helping.”

Stefan Kane,medical director of maternity services at the Royal Women’s Hospital and a maternal-fetal medicine subspecialist obstetrician,said the silver lining in the latest Omicron wave was that infected pregnant women were largely at least triple vaccinated and less likely to become critically ill.

Medical director maternity services at the Royal Women’s Hospital Stefan Kane said the silver lining in the latest Omicron wave was pregnant women infected with coronavirus were largely triple vaccinated and far less inclined to become critically ill.

Medical director maternity services at the Royal Women’s Hospital Stefan Kane said the silver lining in the latest Omicron wave was pregnant women infected with coronavirus were largely triple vaccinated and far less inclined to become critically ill.Chris Hopkins

Last year’s Delta outbreak caused a surge in unvaccinated pregnant women and new mothers being admitted to intensive care,critically ill with coronavirus.

“Unlike earlier waves of the pandemic,we aren’t seeing as many very unwell women and I think that’s a combination both of the impact of vaccination,and also possibly the different ways in which the new variants affect people,” Kane said.

But with more than 10,000 new coronavirus infections being reported each day in Victoria and thousands more going undetected,staffing shortages mean nurses and midwives are frequently working double shifts,overtime and coming in on days off.

“It’s so important to acknowledge just how hard they are working in very,very difficult circumstances and how dedicated they are to the care of pregnant women,” Kane said.

The family of a cardiac arrest survivor is demanding more be done to fix the state's overwhelmed health system,after he was left waiting in the back of an ambulance outside Frankston hospital.

John Regan,the vice president of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists,who is also the head of obstetrics at Monash Medical Centre in Clayton,said the ward was facing crippling staff shortages,estimating it was typically about 20 per cent.

There are three rooms at Monash designated for COVID-19. The hospital has also become a priority site for COVID-positive mothers who are experiencing acute respiratory issues and need intensive care.

A lack of available midwives and doctors meant planned caesareans or birth inductions were being rescheduled up to four times,and in some cases for up to three days,Khot said.

Births are often induced when mothers have blood-pressure issues,gestational diabetes or have gone well past their due date.

“If you delay a scheduled C-section,a woman might go into labour and you have to do the C-section in the middle of the night with fewer staff because you have no other option,” Khot said.

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation Victorian secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick.

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation Victorian secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick.Luis Ascui

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation Victorian secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick warned recommended midwife-to-patient ratios in postnatal care wards were still only being met about 60 per cent of the time.

Fitzpatrick said midwives were repeatedly doing double shifts as hospitals struggled to fill gaps,mostly due to respiratory illnesses. Hospitals were also relying heavily on final-year midwifery students or registered nurses finishing up their postgraduate studies in midwifery.

“They are[maternity hospitals and midwives] desperately trying to ensure that they don’t adjust any sort of visitor rules,” Fitzpatrick said.

“But that comes with a lot of additional work for the nurses and midwives.”

All hospital visitors must be fully vaccinated or show evidence of a negative result from a rapid antigen test taken on the day of the visit.

A Victorian government spokeswoman said:“Despite the global midwife shortage,staff absences due to COVID or the flu and record demand on our health system,our midwives and nurses continue to deliver the best possible care to the community.”

“We’re investing nearly $10 million to support,train and place undergraduate midwives in our hospitals providing much-needed support on the ground,” she said. The government was also building capacity in midwifery and nursing,she said.

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Timna Jacks is a Senior Reporter,covering health for The Age. Timna has previously covered transport and education.

Melissa Cunningham is a city reporter for The Age. She has previously covered health and has also been a reporter for The Sunday Age.

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