https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/rainbow-flag.jpg
514
768
Kevina Kiganda
https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png
Kevina Kiganda2024-06-19 15:38:232024-07-31 15:38:50Anticipating the Cass Review? A personal historical reflectionblogs
https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/rainbow-flag.jpg
514
768
Kevina Kiganda
https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png
Kevina Kiganda2024-06-19 15:38:232024-07-31 15:38:50Anticipating the Cass Review? A personal historical reflection
Walk75 | Prayer Walk for Health

McArthur ‘Assisted Dying’ Bill announced

A confluence of evils

Midwifery in the headlines

Striking the right balance

Want to change the future?

The ‘Letby effect’ on this paediatric nurse

The UK’s first womb transplant – what the media missed out

Lucy Letby – a warning for NHS culture

Lucy Letby- a deep grief

Doctors on strike – reflections of a conflicted consultant
Midwifery in the headlines
/in Blog, NHS GuestMidwifery was in the news for all the wrong reasons at the end of last year. As a midwife of ten years, I was heartbroken to read headlines from The Times that said: ‘Midwives “toxic” working conditions putting babies’ lives at risk, report finds‘ and The Telegraph that said: “Russian roulette’ maternity units risk lives […]
Striking the right balance
/in Blog, Christianity, Medical Practice, NHS, Strikes Guesthow can Christian medics decide about industrial action? Until a decade ago, I was a medic struggling through the NHS quagmire. So, when I had the opportunity to join the CMF Junior Doctors Conference back in November 2023, I prepared myself to meet lots of doctors now near drowning in the thickening muck. In the […]
Want to change the future?
/in Blog, Christianity, CMF Felicia WongHaving grown up in a TV family, I particularly loved movies that fostered the imagination, especially time travel. To be able to change what could have been or what might be, was the stuff of childhood dreams. What would you change if you could time travel? Suppose you could jump in a time machine, and […]
The ‘Letby effect’ on this paediatric nurse
/in Blog, Medical Practice, Nursing Bex LawtonFirstly, let me say that I cannot even begin to imagine the grief the families involved in this case must have gone through these last eight years and are still going through. The atrocities committed by Lucy Letby are chilling and deeply distressing. Honestly, it doesn’t seem enough to say that my ‘thoughts and prayers’ […]
The UK’s first womb transplant – what the media missed out
/in Blog, Medical Practice, New Technologies Trevor StammersThe first UK ‘womb transplant’, carried out by Richard Smith’s team in Oxford and announced at the end of August, understandably gained a lot of press coverage and was heralded by some as the ‘dawn of a new era’. In fact, the first uterus transplant was carried out in 2000 in Saudi Arabia in a […]
Lucy Letby – a warning for NHS culture
/in Blog, NHS GuestThe tragic loss of life and heartache caused by Lucy Letby is beyond imagination. Our hearts go out to all those affected. Undoubtedly, mistakes were made that look even worse with the power and accuracy of the ‘retrospectoscope’. Patient safety was not put first, nor was the dogged pursuit of the truth of what happened […]
Lucy Letby- a deep grief
/in Blog, Nursing GuestThis is such a deeply disturbing case. One of the most horrifying scandals to ever hit the NHS. A neonatal nurse killed seven babies and attempted to murder six more. The perpetrator being a nurse is causing our nurse and midwife members, and us in the CMF Nurses & Midwives team, real grief. First, we’d […]
Doctors on strike – reflections of a conflicted consultant
/in Blog, Medical Practice, NHS GuestOn 1 August 1983, my life changed forever. I started work in the NHS. I lost all that I had known of normal life and have spent the last 40 years working in a broken system. I am in no doubt it needs fixing. Navigating endless demands with inadequate resources has been costly. From the […]
Complete societal capture on abortion
/in Blog, Start of Life Jennie PollockThe sentencing of a woman for two years imprisonment for performing a home abortion with pills obtained via a phone consultation raises lots of questions. However, the main question asked in an almost universal chorus of headlines was why are our ‘archaic’ and ‘unfair’ abortion laws still in place? ‘A woman has been jailed for […]
Mitochondrial manipulated births: a muted reception
/in Blog, New Technologies Trevor StammersFor a prospect anticipated for almost 20 years, the announcement in a Guardian exclusive of the successful birth of one or more babies from one or other technique of what is usually termed mitochondrial donation therapy (MDT) had a more muted reception the following day than might have been predicted. It came second after the […]
When is a ‘synthetic’ embryo a real embryo?
/in Blog, Start of Life Trevor StammersEmbryonic stem cell-derived embryos (ESCDEs) have been around for a long time. Last year, an ESCDE, assembled from mouse cells in vitro, replicated natural mouse embryo development in utero up to day 8.5 post-fertilisation. In mouse gestation terms, this amounts to the completion of gastrulation and the start of organ formation and neurulation. In February […]
You wouldn’t do it to a dog! Current fetal pain relief in NHS abortions
/in Blog, Start of Life Dr Rick ThomasThis blog should perhaps carry one of those BBC-style warnings, ‘some viewers may find the following content distressing’. This is because it deals with something most of us would prefer not to think about – the dispatching of an unwanted, late-second or third-trimester fetus, or ‘feticide.’ We do not here comment on the morality of […]












