Pregnancy - Thomson 158 Reuters https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com Latest News Updates Mon, 14 Oct 2024 16:08:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 The Latest Maternity Leave Figures Sum Up Why Birth Rates Are Falling In The UK https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com/the-latest-maternity-leave-figures-sum-up-why-birth-rates-are-falling-in-the-uk/ https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com/the-latest-maternity-leave-figures-sum-up-why-birth-rates-are-falling-in-the-uk/#respond Mon, 14 Oct 2024 16:08:45 +0000 https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com/the-latest-maternity-leave-figures-sum-up-why-birth-rates-are-falling-in-the-uk/ Just weeks after the former women and equalities minister, Kemi Badenoch, said that maternity pay is ‘excessive’, new research from Pregnant Then Screwed, and Women in DataⓇ has revealed that 4 in 10 mothers took just 12 weeks or less following the birth of their most recent child — thanks to the low maternity pay […]

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Just weeks after the former women and equalities minister, Kemi Badenoch, said that maternity pay is ‘excessive’, new research from Pregnant Then Screwed, and Women in DataⓇ has revealed that 4 in 10 mothers took just 12 weeks or less following the birth of their most recent child — thanks to the low maternity pay in the UK.

According to Citizen’s Advice, statutory maternity pay lasts up to 39 weeks, made up of: 6 weeks getting 90% of your average weekly pay (before tax), 33 weeks getting either £184.03 a week or 90% of your average weekly pay (before tax) – whichever is less. Which is a staggering 43% of the national living wage.

Excessive isn’t quite the word, really.

The UK’s fertility rate is falling faster than any other G7 nation

Given how poorly parents are treated once they’ve had children, it’s perhaps no surprise that the UK’s fertility rate is falling faster than any other G7 nation – with austerity thought to be ‘principal factor’.

If we can’t afford to look after our babies once they are born, it makes sense that many people are choosing to not have their own children at all.

One person on X said: “Most adults now have to live with parents through their 20s, commonly through their 30s.

“Millennials are the first generation to be poorer than the last in over 200 years, and have had an adulthood of austerity, recession, and a pandemic. Why would they have kids?”

More maternity support is essential

Pregnant Then Screwed is calling on the government to increase the rate of statutory maternity pay and maternity allowance to the national living wage. An amount which is widely regarded as the absolute minimum someone needs to live on.

In a press statement, the charity said: “We know that maternity leave more than 12 weeks has huge benefits for a mother and her child. It decreases rates of maternal physical and mental health issues, decreases infant mortality and improves rates of breastfeeding.”

Joeli Brearley, CEO and Founder of Pregnant Then Screwed commented, “The perinatal period is critically important to the health and well-being of a mother and her child, and I think we should all be deeply concerned that due to severe hardship, we are now seeing a degeneration and a degradation of this vital period.

“Ultimately, It is a false economy to not pay parental leave at a rate on which families can survive and thrive.

“We need a government that will listen to parents, creating policies which ensure they can survive and thrive, particularly in those early days. Right now we are falling way behind our European counterparts, and it is not only this generation which is suffering the consequences, but it will be the next.’’

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Governing bodies must step up to close gender gap in sport science https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com/governing-bodies-must-step-up-to-close-gender-gap-in-sport-science/ https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com/governing-bodies-must-step-up-to-close-gender-gap-in-sport-science/#respond Thu, 19 Jan 2023 09:00:00 +0000 https://thomson158reuters.servehalflife.com/governing-bodies-must-step-up-to-close-gender-gap-in-sport-science/ There is definitely more awareness around the gender gap in sport science now and there is a lot of catching up to do. It is a big gap but we cannot just look at it and say: “It is too big, let’s not bother.” There are so many amazing things that we can do and […]

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There is definitely more awareness around the gender gap in sport science now and there is a lot of catching up to do. It is a big gap but we cannot just look at it and say: “It is too big, let’s not bother.” There are so many amazing things that we can do and if we can talk about it more and get more funding and investment into this area, it will start to shrink that gap, which is so important.

When I was competing, I do not think anything was very specific to me as a female athlete. There was the odd time when we would touch on, “Are you on your period?”, but there was no individual approach to how I went through certain phases of training in relation to me as a female athlete and my physiology. It just seemed like it was very generic and, “This is the way we do things, and it applies to men and women”. 

It is only since I retired that I have actually stopped and questioned where all the research comes from, how up to date it is, how it is brought together. There was never really that understanding when I was a competing athlete.

As an athlete, you have to be ready for certain times. You cannot move the Olympics or change when the World Championships and tournaments are, so you work towards those – but it is the way you work towards those. Coaches have to make programmes specific to individuals, but I think they also have to take in that overriding hormonal fluctuation and changes that female athletes go through because that determines how hard you push and ease back at certain phases of your training, and that plays into injuries or recurrent injuries and the like. A lot of female athletes would probably say, ‘Perhaps I could have trained differently and more effectively around certain stages of my life and my menstrual cycle’.

There is a much bigger picture, which we do not often think about in enough detail. It is great that more female athletes feel they can vocalise how they feel. Beth Mead has talked about the need for more research into anterior-cruciate ligament injuries, Leah Williamson has spoken about dealing with endometriosis.

Conversations like that, and around periods and so on, definitely have to be normalised, so athletes feel comfortable talking about it. They also have to know there is a route they can go down to understand that side of things better and be supported.

That goes for pregnancy as well. Now there are more sportswomen starting families – I saw Naomi Osaka announced she was pregnant and wanted to come back to tennis, which is great – but athletes need a system in place and to know that they are supported in that transition.

Going through pregnancy and postnatally, I had to understand how my body and my physiology was so different. When I came back from having Reggie, I had to try to read as much as I could because I did not know what to expect, and my team, however amazing they were, had never had to bring their athlete back from pregnancy and go through that journey. There was no guidance, so they all had to further their knowledge. My physio had to go to do extra courses and learn all these different things that she had never thought about before.

It is understanding how your hormones going up and down can massively affect ligaments, speed, endurance levels and how you train. All of these different things are massively impacted by your hormones, so why do we not understand them more? Then we can hopefully address issues such as ACL injuries that might occur more frequently in women, or endometriosis and those things that a lot of women do face while quietly having to get on with the day-to-day in their sport.

When I started on the journey of my app, which helps women understand their hormones better, it massively surprised me that such little research is done on women specifically from a health perspective. When it comes to sport, there is that same inconsistency. There is just not enough research being carried out to understand the impact that certain things have on female athletes, such as their physiology and individual make-up. It is a no-brainer to put more funding and support into those areas.

One of the reasons there is such little research is because women are complex beings. We have all these changes and fluctuations that happen throughout our bodies at different stages – pregnancy, perimenopause, menopause. To carry out a certain level of research takes a lot of time and energy and a lot of money. These are pieces of research you cannot do overnight, it takes time to collate lots of data, to understand women and their health needs.

We need to look at how we can support women from a digital perspective to have a better understanding of their own health so we are all well informed and that all comes under the umbrella of femtech, giving women more sophisticated and specialised tools to understand their physiology in a more in-depth way. In the past, it has definitely been something that has been almost forgotten and it is accepted that we just follow a path that works for men.

It is great that academics are doing research on women in sport, but it should fall on the sports organisations and governing bodies as well. We look at levels of nutrition, psychology and whatever it may be, but can we honestly say we have got great support packages that are specialised to female athletes to help them be the best they can be? 

If we can collect information and data on athletes over a long period of time, that is a massive positive and we will have a better understanding for girls coming into different sports in the future.

To start closing this knowledge gap, there is the education piece of getting more athletes to understand their bodies. Then you need the support of sports federations and governing bodies, and those people who want to invest. It is not a simple process, but if we start chipping away and do it properly, it will translate massively and loop back round to young girls coming into sport. Then they are set up in a much better way to understand their physiology, and it will be the norm.

If both my children want to go into sport one day, I hope that they will feel they are catered for in an equal way, one being a boy and one a girl; that they know they are not left out of any research and know the way they are training is right for them because the research has been done properly and been understood properly from their perspective. Let us close this gap.

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