Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Turned away by hospital, Indian-origin woman gives birth at home

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Jul, 2014 12:56 PM
    An Indian-origin woman in labour was turned away from a hospital's maternity unit in Britain - only to give birth 40 minutes later in her mother's living room, a media report said.
     
    Zeenat Patel, 26, and her partner, Yaseen Lockhat, first went to the maternity unit at Royal Bolton Hospital in Lancashire county about 3.30 p.m. July 3, the Daily Mail reported Monday.
     
    Patel claimed she was refused a second labour check by a triage nurse when she called her.
     
    She claimed a triage nurse told her she was not in "active" labour and advised her to go home until the contractions became more frequent, the report said.
     
    But an hour after the couple left, Patel found herself in constant pain and called the maternity triage nurse at 5.50 p.m. - and she was told again to wait at home.
     
    Concerned their baby was just minutes away from being born, the couple drove back to the hospital. 
     
    "My labour pains were getting a lot stronger and I just knew the baby was going to come soon," Patel was quoted as saying.
     
    "By the time I had explained this over the phone, got cut off and got back through again, we were outside the hospital doors," Patel said.
     
    "They spoke to me like I was a child, like I didn't know my own body. I'd given birth before and I knew what was happening, but they wouldn't listen. We were left with no alternative but to go home," she added.
     
    But as soon as Lockhat dropped her off at her mother's house, Patel started to give birth, the report said.
     
    Her mother, Hanifa, delivered the baby herself on the living room floor aided by a 999 call-handler. 
     
    "All I could do was push. I kept thinking if they had checked me, I wouldn't be giving birth in this situation," she explained.
     
    "I stayed in the toilet because I didn't want my three-year-old daughter, Jasmine, to see what was happening."
     
    "Giving birth is meant to be a special experience, but this was just traumatic."
     
    When her mother, Hanifa, heard her daughter scream in the toilet and saw the baby's head, she dialled 999.
     
    Patel's mother, 54, said: "It all happened so quickly. It was very scary. I grabbed some towels and managed to lie her down in the living room. It was very difficult because I had to hold the phone and catch the baby as she was born."
     
    Paramedics arrived 25 minutes after the baby was born and took the mother and daughter to hospital. 
     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Sikh school in Britain reassures parents on pupils' safety

    Sikh school in Britain reassures parents on pupils' safety
    A Sikh school in Britain has reassured its students and their parents that its premises are completely safe after it was claimed that the school was constructed on contaminated soil, media reported Monday.

    Sikh school in Britain reassures parents on pupils' safety

    Labour party suspends Indian-origin candidate in Britain

    Labour party suspends Indian-origin candidate in Britain
    An Indian-origin man, who is running for a local election in Britain's West London next month, was suspended by the British Labour party as its candidate after it was found that he was embroiled in a court case.

    Labour party suspends Indian-origin candidate in Britain

    Corageous popes John XXIII, John Paul II are saints

    Corageous popes John XXIII, John Paul II are saints
    Popes John XXIII and John Paul II were canonised by Pope Francis Sunday in the Vatican City, the country's official news network News.VA said

    Corageous popes John XXIII, John Paul II are saints

    Sherpas, the people who make it possible to scale Everest

    Sherpas, the people who make it possible to scale Everest
    The death of 13 Sherpas and the disappearance of three more in an avalanche on Mount Everest has brought into sharp focus the danger faced by these guides who make climbing the highest mountain in the world possible.

    Sherpas, the people who make it possible to scale Everest

    Australian man denies hijacking Bali-bound flight

    Australian man denies hijacking Bali-bound flight
    The Australian man who sparked a hijack scare on a Bali-bound flight from Brisbane has denied that he was drunk and thought the cockpit door was the entrance to the toilet, a media report said Saturday.

    Australian man denies hijacking Bali-bound flight

    Indian man charged with groping woman on flight to US

    Indian man charged with groping woman on flight to US
    An Indian origin man has been charged with simple assault for allegedly groping a sleeping fellow female passenger for about five minutes on a flight from London to San Francisco.

    Indian man charged with groping woman on flight to US