Media: Casey Hospital’s Maternity Unit celebrates 20-year anniversary

As featured in Star News, the Maternity Unit at Casey Hospital is celebrating 20 years of delivering babies.

There have been more than 37,500 births at the hospital in Berwick since the first baby was delivered there on 22 March 2005.

Original members of the unit’s maternity team fondly recall establishing the service 2 decades ago.

‘Initially, there were 6 of us there with no patients and no other midwives, just setting up the unit, buying equipment and looking through new policies and procedures ready for the midwives to start,’ said Margaret Pickering, original Associate Nurse Unit Manager of the Maternity Unit, now Nursing Co-Ordinator at Casey Hospital.

The unit’s first birth was highly anticipated.

‘Every time the phone rang, a midwife ran to the phone hoping it would be someone in labour coming in to have a baby!’

‘I remember the very first lady who did come into birth. Everyone was so excited, and everyone wanted to be part of the birth. And they put their names in a hat to draw out the midwife who was going to be the lucky person to be able to deliver the first baby at Casey.’

Ms Pickering is proud of the unit’s record of listening to and responding to community wishes.

‘We met with women and listened to what they wanted and put things together, things like water births and water immersion for labour that wasn’t offered at many maternity units back in those days. Later we offered home birth.’

In the initial planning phase, Casey Hospital’s Maternity Unit was envisaged as a midwife led service for low-risk births, with women experiencing any issues to be transferred to Dandenong Hospital for specialist care.

But, as planning progressed it was decided specialist obstetricians would be made available to come onsite at any time, allowing more women to safely deliver their babies close to home and their families.

‘I was one of the 6 original obstetricians at Casey from day one. Three of us continue to work there,’ said Dr Mark Tarrant, Head of Obstetrics at Casey Hospital.

‘I see it as my family. It’s one of those places where it’s nice to come to work. It’s friendly.’

 

Mark Tarrant and Margaret Pickering

Casey Hospital started with 500 births a year. Its position in a high growth area has since seen the number of births rise to 2,500 annually. With more births, complex cases have also increased.

‘The hospital has become a premier training site for specialist obstetricians. We now have 16 consultants on staff, of which at least 8 have trained at Casey Hospital. So, we’ve trained our own specialists through’, Dr Tarrant said.

The hospital manages low and high-risk pregnancies. Midwives provide the majority of care, with obstetricians onsite Monday to Friday and available outside hours.

‘We have developed very much a culture where midwives and doctors work as a team. We make sure we have the right person for the patient at the time they are required, and we work together,’ said Dr Tarrant.



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