Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee 26 November 2025
Yes, there is. Lots of work goes into that. This is really a question for an obstetrician, but there are tools to predict which mums are going to deliver early.
Sometimes, there are clinical factors, such as multiple births, that make early delivery more likely. Women who have had a previous pre-term birth are at higher risk of delivering early, as are some women who have problems with, say, their cervix. On most occasions, the obstetrician can predict when women are likely to deliver early. Some women just go into labour early, and that cannot be predicted, but as long as they can be transferred early enough in the process, it can happen in a safe and timely way.
Unfortunately, there are some women who go quickly, and unpredictably, into premature labour. In those circumstances, the baby needs to be transferred after birth, which, as I have said, is less than ideal and something we try to avoid. That is the purpose of organising care in networks and trying to ensure that mums are transferred rather than babies.