Woman gives birth on pavement outside maternity unit

STV

A woman has given birth on the pavement at the front door of a maternity unit in freezing temperatures.

Lisa McNeil said she waited six minutes for nurses to answer the buzzer at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife.

Her baby, Jackson, was born on the icy pavement outside the maternity wing in the early hours of Sunday morning. Temperatures in the area were at minus 4C when Lisa went into labour shortly after 12am.

The 25-year-old from Glenrothes said the experience was "unbelievable".

She told the Daily Record newspaper: "It was like a horror movie. I was in a lot of pain and bleeding. I don't remember much because I was screaming in agony for six minutes while we waited for someone to help us.

"They knew I was coming but no one heard us buzzing to get in or our screams for help.

"I don't think anyone should be put through the humiliation of having to give birth on a pavement outside a hospital in front of strangers."

When midwives finally came to the door, Jackson had been born. Nurses cut the umbilical cord and took the new mother - who was released from hospital last night - up to the ward.

Her mother Karen told the newspaper: "It is scandalous and must never ever happen again. I will be calling for an investigation into this to make sure no one has to suffer and be humiliated like my daughter."

An NHS Fife spokeswoman said: "NHS Fife can confirm that when a lady who had phoned ahead rang the buzzer, midwife staff made their way to the front door to admit her.

"However, labour was so far advanced that delivery took place at the door of the hospital."

An NHS Fife spokeswoman said later on Monday that the health board had reviewed relevant phone records and video recordings around the birth. She insisted midwives were with the woman within two minutes of her arrival at the door.

She said the family had initially pressed the bell for assessment services and not the delivery suite. They called the delivery suite just over a minute later and midwives opened the door just under a minute after that.

The baby was, according to the spokeswoman, delivered just under three minutes later.

She added: "NHS Fife appreciates that this will have been a difficult time for the family. However, it is not always possible to predict the speed of delivery."