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Maternity Services: Staff

Question for Department of Health and Social Care

UIN 7891, tabled on 5 January 2024

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, how many maternity support workers there were in the NHS in each of the last five years.

Answered on

11 January 2024

This answer is a correction from the original answer.

The following table shows the full-time equivalent number of maternity support workers working in National Health Service hospital trusts and other core organisations in England, annually from September 2018 to 2023:

Year

Maternity Services

Neonatal Nursing

Total

September 2018

6,843

417

7,260

September 2019

6,951

435

7,386

September 2020

7,126

474

7,600

September 2021

6,987

464

7,451

September 2022

7,195

443

7,638

September 2023

7,577

485

8,063

Source: NHS Workforce Statistics, NHS Digital

Notes:

  1. Maternity support staff can be defined as all support staff that work in the ‘maternity services’ and ‘neonatal nursing’ care settings, with the latter including Special Care Baby Units. This includes nursing associates, nursery nurses, nursing assistants/auxiliaries, healthcare assistants and support workers.
  2. The data includes staff employed by NHS trusts and other core NHS organisations. It excludes staff directly employed general practitioner surgeries, local authorities, and other providers such as community interest companies and private providers.

Original answer

The following table shows the full-time equivalent number of maternity support workers working in National Health Service hospital trusts and other core organisations in England, annually from September 2018 to 2023:

Maternity Services

Neonatal Nursing

Total

September 2018

6,843

417

7,260

September 2019

6,951

435

7,386

September 2020

7,126

474

7,600

September 2021

6,987

464

7,451

September 2022

7,195

443

7,638

September 2023

7,577

485

8,063

Source: NHS Workforce Statistics, NHS Digital

Notes:

  1. Maternity support staff can be defined as all support staff that work in the ‘maternity services’ and ‘neonatal nursing’ care settings, with the latter including Special Care Baby Units. This includes nursing associates, nursery nurses, nursing assistants/auxiliaries, healthcare assistants and support workers.
  2. The data includes staff employed by NHS trusts and other core NHS organisations. It excludes staff directly employed general practitioner surgeries, local authorities, and other providers such as community interest companies and private providers.