About Us

Introduction

The Lancashire and South Cumbria (LSC) Local Maternity and Neonatal System (LMNS) was established in April 2017. It is now known as the LSC Maternity and Newborn Alliance (MNA) reflecting local maternity providers, commissioners, higher education institutes, north west coast clinical network, north west neonatal operational delivery network, local authorities and other key partners operating together.

Our purpose is to provide place-based planning and leadership for transformation ensuring services are co-designed with service users and local communities, with the responsibility for improving maternity services and outcomes based on the principles contained within Better Births – Five Year Forward View 2016, ensuring that there is equitable access to services for all women and their babies, regardless of where they live and their ethnic background.

The MNA has a wide programme of work which constantly evolves in response to new guidance and directives as it emerges. Following the Five Year Forward View – Better Births and the NHS Long Term Plan, in December 2020 the Ockenden Report was published, further evidencing the continued need for improving safety in our maternity and newborn services and mandating urgent priorities for compliance. From April 2022 we will also have s statutory responsibility to provide LMS wide quality assurance.

Our vision is to improve outcomes for women and families through provision of safe and high-quality maternity services.  The vision also harnesses technology and innovation to enable choice and personalisation of care.

Our values demonstrate our commitment to work together as leaders of our organisations, our localities and of Lancashire & South Cumbria Maternity Services.

National Guidance and Information

National Guidance and Information

 

Three Year Delivery Plan for Maternity and Neonatal Services

Three year delivery plan for maternity and neonata services


National Maternity Transformation Programme (including National Deliverables)

NHS England » Maternity Transformation Programme


Implementing Quality Surveillance Model

NHS England » Implementing a revised perinatal quality surveillance model


Quality Surveillance Groups Guidance

quality-surveillance-groups-guidance-july-2017.pdf (england.nhs.uk)


Final Ockenden Report

Final report of the Ockenden review – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)


NHS Long Term Plan – Maternity

NHS Long Term Plan » Maternity and neonatal services


NICE

NICE | The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

Vanessa Wilson

Vanessa Wilson

Programme Director, Women & Children’s Services, Lancashire and South Cumbria ICS

Bio

Initially trained as a dietitian I moved into commissioning following a relocation to the North west.

After 11 years in commissioning, including being Director of Service Transformation and then Director of Commissioning at Blackburn with Darwen PCT, my career took a change in direction in 2011 when I moved into operational management as Divisional Director of Operations, at East Lancashire Hospitals Trust, for the Family Care Division.

I spent 7 happy years at ELHT but am now thoroughly enjoying the opportunity  to lead the Women and Children’s Programme for Lancashire and South Cumbria Integrated Care System including the Better Births Programme and Children and Young People’s Transformation Programme – I am determined that by working together as a system we will make a real difference for families.

vanessa.wilson6@nhs.net
07432 514677

Susan Stansfield

Susan Stansfield

Associate Director, Maternity and Newborn, Lancashire and South Cumbria ICS

Bio

Sue is the Associate Director for Maternity and Newborn with Lancs and South Cumbria ICB, she has 36 years’ continuous service in the NHS.  Sue is a Midwife and a Nurse and has worked in various roles across the NW region; early in my career as a Midwife working on Neonatal Intensive Care Units and Community roles, following promotions, as a Sister, Matron, Lead Nurse, Unit Manager, Divisional Nurse Director for Child Health Services, Deputy Director of Nursing, Divisional Director of Operations and Head of Midwifery. Sue also covered the role of NW Regional Chief Midwife with NHSE for a 12 month period whilst the substantive post holder was on a career break.

Sue’s strengths include strong operational management and leadership experience, with excellent communication skills.  She is highly motivated, enthusiastic, flexible, dependable and discreet.  Sue works cohesively as part of a team and regularly prioritise work to meet deadlines; she values diversity and believes in a social inclusive model of care.

susan.stansfield3@nhs.net
07919 072431

Alexandra Murphy

Alexandra Murphy

Public Health, Prevention and Early Intervention Strategic Manager

Bio

I have a background at both practitioner and leadership level in both midwifery and health visiting.

Previous roles have included Infant Feeding Coordinator for community services and then later within maternity, Specialist Health Visitor for Sure Start, Practice Development Lead for 0-19 services and Development Support Officer at the Centre for Early Child Development at A Better Start Blackpool leading on the transformation of Blackpool’s health visiting service.

Currently as Public Health, Prevention and Early Intervention Strategic Manager for the local maternity transformation programme within Lancashire and South Cumbria, my work nurtures a shift in culture to ensure that prevention work is embedded in the daily work across our maternity units and associated local systems. Our current priority areas are smoke free pregnancies, parent-infant relationships, infant feeding, maternal nutrition and trauma informed care.

Together with service users, services, commissioners and local public health teams we co-produce action plans which aim to standardise policies, guidance and training for staff and to develop or strengthen pathways of care for service users so that you can access care that is personalised to you.

alexandra.murphy5@nhs.net

Jo Dorrity

Jo Dorrity

Transformation Programme Manager for Maternity Services in Lancashire & South Cumbria

Bio
I  have worked in service development and project and programme management for the NHS for over 15 years.

My experience has included working in all elements of Mental Health services, from community teams through to high secure services, drug and alcohol services, primary care vanguard site in Fylde and Wyre for the new models of care for primary care, and very happily for the last 4 years working across Lancashire and South Cumbria managing a complex programme of work in maternity to improve experience and outcomes for all women and families in Lancashire and South Cumbria.

I am so passionate about the work we are delivering and am grateful for the opportunity to work with talented and passionate professionals from all partners involved in this Alliance. 

Coralie Rogers

Coralie Rogers

Clinical Lead for Digital Maternity

Bio
I am a practising midwife with over 30 years clinical and senior leadership experience. My most recent roles were as deputy head of service and as a consultant midwife, both with a focus on governance, risk and service improvement, linked to the post Kirkup and Better Births recommendations. I was the one of three midwifery advisors involved in the development of the perinatal mortality review tool and an MBRRACE assessor.

In these roles I led and implemented several innovative schemes contributing to safety through collaboration including an NHSE commended Always Event to enable women to have a partner or supporter staying with them in hospital after birth and a programme for ambulance crews to work with midwives on labour ward.

Since joining the Better Births programme, I have led on the procurement and implementation of the BadgerNet maternity system. This piece of work, which brings all providers together by using a single version (identical) pregnancy record will help us here in Lancashire and South Cumbria to improve safety, quality and choice.

Beth Luxmoore

Beth Luxmoore

North West Coast Clinical Network Manager

Bio
Beth has worked as the North West Coast Clinical Network Manager for Perinatal Mental Health since 2016, and has since had two babies of her own.

Beth’s work aims to improve mental health support for families in the perinatal period and reduce the stigma around mental health needs in this time, hopefully making services more accessible for families. She is passionate about service user involvement and co-production between clinicians and people with lived experience.

Beth’s role in the team is to support quality improvement projects relating to perinatal mental health and to help the local health and social care systems work towards an integrated approach to perinatal mental health care between mental health, maternity, health visiting and other services.

Tracy Marsden

Tracy Marsden

Lancashire and South Cumbria Reproductive Trauma Service Manager

Bio

Whilst my background is youth work I have always felt strongly that working with the wider family unit was critical – through this role I had the privilege of setting up Award Winning services across the North of England for families which often required strong links with Mental Health, Criminal Justice and Safeguarding services.

As the Director of Communities at Lancashire Women I was provided with an increased opportunity to develop services which met the needs of women and their families one of which was Perinatal Mental Health working alongside some amazing colleagues with a shared passion for service development, innovation, collaboration and forward thinking.

I feel that my work previously within the voluntary sector provides me with a perspective of understanding regarding the challenges many women and their families face on a daily basis. As I embark on my current role I aim to encompass my learning, knowledge and experience from the last 30 years as I mobilise the Lancashire and South Cumbria Maternal Mental Health Service with an amazingly dedicated team which will support those who are impacted by loss, birth trauma and/or tokophobia as a result of their maternity, neonatal or perinatal journey .

tracy.marsden5@nhs.net

News & updates

Maternity & Neonatal Summit 2023

The Maternity and Neonatal Summit will bring together the multi-disciplinary teams who are instrumental in the delivery of maternity and neonatal...

My 53-year Career as a Midwife

Eileen Shaw, started out as a student Nurse in 1969 in Northern Ireland, before qualifying as a midwife in 1974. Eileen has since had a 53 year...

These resources are designed to be a living space – please use it, and add to it if you have information, insights, or materials that might optimise the way maternity and neonatal care could best be provided, now or in the future, both in times of crisis, and in times when there are less challenges to the health system.

For all the latest information on the Maternity Transformation Hub click here.