Recommendations and Learning

Findings and Recommendations

Maternity care works best when it is relational, unhurried, and grounded in women’s own knowledge and experiences.

What we learned from Born from the Heart, Photos of the Soul, an exhibition of photos and stories created by South London women through Photovoice.

What the project found

Women asked to be listened to, understood, and supported as whole people, not only through clinical interactions.

The MORE Project highlighted the importance of relational, culturally respectful, and holistic maternity care that recognises women as experts in their own lives and experiences.

Across the exhibition themes, participants described the importance of being listened to, understood, and supported as whole people rather than solely through clinical interactions. Experiences of work, migration, family life, mental health, spirituality, identity, and support networks all shaped how women experienced pregnancy and motherhood.

The project generated recommendations focused on continuity of care, trauma-informed and relational practice, peer support, flexible services, and creating opportunities for women’s voices and lived experiences to shape maternity care and service improvement.

The exhibition also demonstrated the value of participatory and peer research approaches in creating spaces for reflection, dialogue, community connection, and meaningful engagement with maternity inequalities.

Recommendations

The recommendations below focus on redistributing power, building trust, and supporting the full context of women’s lives in maternity care.

1

Start with women’s priorities

Open each interaction by asking what women would like to focus on.

2

Build continuity of care

Enable relationships and trust by ensuring women see the same midwife, healthcare providers or small team, including outside of scheduled appointments.

3

Map and strengthen support networks

Work with women to identify who supports them and connect them to community resources where gaps exist.

4

Integrate peer support into routine care

Create opportunities, such as groups and drop-ins, for women to connect and support each other.

5

Provide practical, holistic support

Offer rest spaces, feeding support, and joined up physical and mental health care, recognising the demands of motherhood.

6

Recognise women as experts in their own bodies

Actively involve women in care planning and respect their knowledge and choices.

7

Provide culturally respectful care

Make space for cultural, spiritual, and community practices within maternity care.

8

Train staff in trauma-informed, relational practice

Focus on listening, validation, and recognising less visible distress.

9

Build flexible services around women’s lives

Adapt appointments, timing, and location to reflect women’s circumstances, including work, migration, and family contexts.

Creating opportunities for women’s voices to shape maternity care.