A general view of prison officers at work at the new HMP Bronzefield (womens prison) in Ashford, Middlesex.
Prison officers at work at HMP Bronzefield (Picture: PA)

A newborn baby died after a teenage girl gave birth alone in a cell in Europe’s largest women’s prison despite calling staff for help, according to a damning report.

The 18-year-old and her lifeless child were not discovered at HMP Bronzefield, in Middlesex, for a full 12 hours after she initially called for a nurse in September 2019, said the watchdog, which found a string of failings in her care.

The mother, known as Ms A, should never have been allowed to give birth without medical assistance at the privately run jail, prisons and probation ombudsman (PPO) Sue McAllister concluded.

Her findings, published today, highlighted a catalogue of ‘troubling weaknesses’ in the way the prison and healthcare services handled the mother’s care, and made a slew of recommendations for improvements in handling pregnant prisoners.

Ms A was behind bars for the first time, facing a charge of robbery. The report described her as vulnerable, having had a ‘traumatic childhood’, and she was thought to have a history of drug and alcohol abuse.

She was ‘sad, angry and very scared’ that her baby would be taken away from her, had said she would ‘kill herself or someone else’ if this happened, engaged ‘minimally or not at all’ with the midwifery team at Ashford and St Peter’s Hospitals NHS Trust (ASPH) in Surrey, and all ante-natal care, including refusing to attend appointments for scans.

But staff at the Sodexo-run prison appeared to regard her as ‘difficult and having a bad attitude’, the report said.

Ms A rang her call bell asking for a nurse just after 8pm on September 26 but one was not sent for. She told inspectors she ‘gave up’ when her subsequent calls less than half an hour later were not answered.

The report said Ms A described being in ‘constant pain’ and ended up having to sit on the toilet before passing out.

After delivering the baby, she ‘managed to bite through the umbilical cord’ before wrapping her baby — who was ‘purple and not breathing’ — in a towel. She put the placenta in the bin, tried to wipe up the blood on the floor and got into bed with the baby.

Undated photo of HMP Bronzefield, in Ashford, Surrey. Georgina Challen, known as Sally, who killed her husband in a hammer attack has won a landmark appeal against her murder conviction.
The 18-year-old and her lifeless child were not discovered for 12 hours (Picture: PA)
Mandatory Credit: Photo by High Level/Shutterstock (1545002d) An aerial view of the Bronzefield women's prison at Ashford, England, Britain Aerial views of Britain - Jan 2012
Prison staff did not discover what had happened until after 8am (Picture: Shutterstock)

Prison staff did not discover what had happened until after 8am the following day. Ambulance crews were called but the child could not be saved.

A pathologist has been unable to determine whether the baby was born alive or was stillborn, and so far no inquest has taken place.

The report found maternity services at Bronzefield were ‘outdated and inadequate’ and contact with health professionals was limited.

Ms A’s lawyer Elaine Macdonald, of Tuckers Solicitors, branded the failings ‘truly shocking’, and called for the concerns raised to be ‘urgently and fully examined’.

Justice secretary Dominic Raab described the events as ‘harrowing, unacceptable and should never happen to any woman or child’ but said ‘important improvements’ have been made to the care received by women in custody.

The NHS has since taken over the healthcare budget for maternity services at the prison.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.