Connect with us
Advertisement
Advertisement

News

SCBU closure: ‘Nurses said our baby would be dead if he was born next month’

Published

on

freddie2A YOUNG couple who are convinced their baby would have died without the help of the special care baby unit at Withybush Hospital have sent a heartfelt message to Heath Minister, Mark Drakeford urging him not to close the unit.
Freddie, who is one of the last babies treated at the unit, was born on July 25, weighing less than three pounds. He is twelve weeks premature.
Dad, Myles Bamford Lewis, 22, from Milford Haven told The Herald: “It was so emotional at the hospital because the nurses were crying. They knew if Freddie had to go to Carmarthen he wouldn’t have made it. The paramedics told us they wouldn’t have got much further than Canaston Bridge before Freddie would have died.”
New mum, Jasmine McGinley, age 19, from Fishguard was in her home town when the ambulance was called.
Jasmine said: “It’s upsetting to think that babies and mothers will be put at risk at the closure of the SCBU.”

She added: “I’m just glad it was still open. The unit is closing a week Monday. The midwives, doctors and nurses nicknamed him ‘Lucky Freddie – a week later and he wouldn’t be here.”
This is the message Jasmine and Myles have sent to Dr. Drakeford: “This is a picture of my son, who will be one of the last to be born at Withybush SCBU under your new plans. Without Withybush he would have been born most probably around Canaston Bridge judging the time scale of my other half’s labour. It took 15 minutes for an ambulance team to get to Fishguard from Withybush, a further 15 minutes to get back. Within 20 minutes my son was born. He then needed medicine to open his lungs properly so he could breath. Being 12 weeks early he is at the end of his development before he starts to grow.”
mylesThe letter went on to say: “I’m not sure if your a father or whether you’ve ever had any problems with pregnancy but unless you start packing ambulances with machines comparable to the ones in an intensive care unit then Pembrokeshire babies will die on the way to Glangwili.”
“Without Withybush SCBU my son would have died. As a father, I beg that you see sense that SCBU is vital to give children the best chance they can get. Your toying with lives here. SCBU is something that should be invested in and not shut down… I’m just glad im not in your shoes, I would hate to be the one who has to tell a grieving father why his child died in the back of an ambulance because you want to save a few pennies.”

9 Comments

9 Comments

  1. wayne marshall

    July 26, 2014 at 11:49 pm

    Dear sir,
    I have heard that camarthen hospital is not ready for the switch yet as the baby unit is not up to scratch so what will happen if the switch goes ahi ead without camarthen being ready i dread to think

  2. Georgiana

    July 27, 2014 at 10:29 am

    Only someone who lives in the city would make decisions such as closing the SCBU. They don’t appreciate how long it takes to get to various hospitals in the ‘sticks’.

    I was told that something like this happened in England. They close the local baby unit and women had to drive 30+ miles to get to the nearest one, babies died and years later they reopened the original unit.

  3. Gareth

    July 27, 2014 at 1:12 pm

    There are good and bad out comes of this. Withybush is only a levle two care and they say they can take 30 weeks pregnant with only level 2 care. Our son was 33 weeks and was left ventilated until a team from Swansea came down to take him to a level 3 care hospital. He got to Swansea in 30 mins. Now with this scubu unit closed withybush will have to take full tearm only reducing risk. That being said every pregnancy is a risk but if needed to be transferred it would be done in an ambulance just for this job and trust me the ambulance has more in it that the whole scubu unit in Haverfordwest. So I wouldn\\\’t say it\\\’s all doom and gloom people only look at the negatives. I personally think it will force hospitals to manage not only cost but risk. People might have a negative out look on this comment but trust me we have been there and done it and with better management in a higher care unit our son would of had a less complex birth and after care

  4. Noo

    July 27, 2014 at 2:16 pm

    Gareth, I think you miss the point here, Carmarthen is also a level 2 unit, without SCBU in Pembs and a specialist team these very premature babies have no chance of survival in those vital few hours, I’m afraid you have been misinformed regarding the equipment aboard the retrieval ambulance they do not carry Ventilators etc, every child deserves the right to life in this day and age

  5. jane perkins

    July 27, 2014 at 4:10 pm

    My son was born 23 years ago. Without the special care baby unit he would not be alive now. I lived in St Davids and the nurses would call us when he need to be fed by me and we did until he could come home. But if he had been in Carmarthen we wouldn\’t have made it on time. So no son. Sadly this is awful news for the people of Pembrokshire and im horrified

  6. Kelly John

    July 27, 2014 at 8:56 pm

    Glangwilli is nowhere near ready to look after extremely premature babies, my daughter was transferred here from singleton during her sbcu, she picked up 3 infections before she was transferred back to recover, it\’s understaffed, not up to specs for these babies without immunity to germs. This is the worst news I\’ve heard for a while and I feel so sorry for the family\’s that will undoubtably suffer 🙁

  7. Tommo

    July 28, 2014 at 9:07 am

    In response to the comment left by Gareth, in no way do ambulances have the same equipment in them that a specialist SCBU unit does. So many specialist medications and machines are needed to keep a premature baby alive. Also specialist nurses who are specifically trained to use these medications and equipment. Babies lives will be lost. 30 minutes is to long. And that\’s on a good day.

  8. Natashia

    July 28, 2014 at 3:13 pm

    I don’t usually agree with suing hospitals, but in this case I hope everyone who looses a loved one with the closure of Withybush does sue. Hit them where it hurts, their pockets!

  9. David Williams

    July 29, 2014 at 12:35 pm

    Gareth, there is no neonatal 2 in Withybush or Glangwili. Withybush is neonatal 2 in everything but name and Hywel Dda only aspire to Neonatal 2 in Glangwili some time in future, not when changes come into effect. In your case nothing would have changed because your baby would still have had to go to Swansea for neonatal 3 except you would have had to take your wife to Carmarthen when he arrived early. Did the air ambulance take the baby to Swansea as there was no way he could have got there from Withybush otherwise. Any pods & staff have to be supplied by Withybush for the emergency ambulance (ambulance service only provide ambulance & driver) so I cannot see how they will have better equipment. Especially as the space is much less in an ambulance than the excellent SCBU at Withybush . Neither will there be consultants at hand as currently until it gets to Glangwili. Unfortunately I think you have been misinformed or not researched enough.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

Conservatives reject calls for more Senedd powers amid Labour devolution row

Published

on

WELSH CONSERVATIVE leader Darren Millar MS has dismissed renewed Labour calls for further Senedd powers, warning that the Welsh Government should “stop making excuses” and focus instead on tackling crises in health, education and the economy.

His comments follow an extraordinary intervention earlier this week by 11 Labour backbench MSs, who wrote to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on 3 December accusing his government of “rolling back” devolution. The signatories — including former ministers Mick Antoniw, Lesley Griffiths and Lee Waters — said they were “increasingly concerned” by the lack of progress on key commitments such as reforming the Barnett formula, devolving rail infrastructure, policing and justice, and transferring the Crown Estate to Wales.

The letter singled out the UK Government’s new “Pride in Place” funding scheme — which sends regeneration money for town-centre improvements directly to Welsh councils — as a “constitutional outrage,” arguing that it sidesteps devolved powers through the UK Internal Market Act 2020. Although First Minister Eluned Morgan has raised the issue with Starmer, no Welsh ministers added their names to the letter, laying bare internal tensions as Labour falls back in polls ahead of the 2026 Senedd election.

Opposition parties seized on the dispute. Plaid Cymru’s Mabon ap Gwynfor MS said it showed Labour “falling apart,” while Welsh Liberal Democrat leader Jane Dodds criticised Westminster’s “deep lack of understanding” of the devolution settlement.

At a Council of the Nations and Regions summit on Thursday, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones — standing in for Starmer — defended the UK Government’s record, saying Labour in Westminster had been “delivering at pace” in partnership with Wales. The 26 November Budget provided £508 million in additional resource and capital funding for Wales over the Spending Review period, alongside commitments to Port Talbot brownfield remediation, a South Wales semiconductor cluster, nuclear investment at Wylfa and a £547 million Local Growth Fund devolved to the Welsh Government. Welsh ministers welcomed many of these as having “generational” value, though the Labour MSs’ letter said they fell short of promised constitutional reform.

The Welsh Conservatives have consistently opposed further Senedd powers, arguing that Cardiff Bay already holds significant authority under the existing settlement established in 1997 and expanded in 2011, 2014 and 2017. Millar, who became Welsh Conservative leader in 2024, has previously ruled out abolishing the Senedd as unrealistic, while urging ministers to “transform people’s lives with devolution” by using existing powers more effectively.

Pointing to record pressures in devolved services, Millar said Labour was fixated on constitutional arguments while outcomes worsen. NHS waiting lists in Wales stood at 789,929 pathways by mid-2025 — nearly one in four residents — with first outpatient waits in parts of Rhondda Cynon Taf stretching from 28 to 68 weeks or more. Public satisfaction with the Welsh NHS averaged 5.1 out of 10 in the year to March 2025, down from 6.3 in 2021–22. Education attendance figures for 2023–24 showed slow post-pandemic recovery, while youth employment (16–24) fell to 52.5% in the year to March 2025. Wales’ unemployment rate rose to 4.1% in the year to June 2025, slightly above the UK’s 4.0%, with areas such as Swansea reaching 8.2%. Economic inactivity among 16–64-year-olds remained high at 24.1%.

Darren Millar MS said: “One Labour Government damaging Wales was bad enough — now we have two, and things are twice as bad.

After two damaging budgets, Welsh Government ministers are focused on infighting about Senedd powers instead of fixing the everyday problems families are facing.

The Senedd doesn’t need more powers. What we need is a government that accepts responsibility, stops making excuses, and uses the extensive powers already available to get to grips with the crisis in our NHS, improve standards in our schools, and tackle Wales’ spiralling unemployment.

Only a Welsh Conservative Government will fix Wales.”

The dispute reflects wider public debate on whether devolution is delivering results. Polling suggests consistent support for having a Senedd, but growing frustration over service performance. With the 2026 election approaching and Reform UK and Plaid Cymru gaining ground, Labour’s internal split over devolution exposes fresh vulnerabilities as the party tries to navigate its relationship with Westminster.

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Capturing the stories of the stars at the Torch Theatre

Published

on

RENOWNED storytellers Daniel Morden and Hugh Lupton are bringing a new intimate theatre experience to Wales next spring, exploring classic myths inspired by the night sky. Stars and their Consolations, produced by Adverse Camber Productions, will tour Wales in Spring 2026 and arrives at the Torch Theatre in March.

The production reimagines well-known Greek star myths through a blend of live storytelling, projected animations of the night sky and a mesmerising electro-acoustic soundscape created by award-winning Welsh composer Sarah Lianne Lewis.

The show has evolved from an earlier collaboration between Adverse Camber, Morden, Lupton and Lewis. Its first incarnation premiered in west Wales at the Beyond the Border Storytelling Festival 2021, and the company further developed the piece in 2022. This enhanced touring version promises a majestic, hypnotic experience that brings ancient tales to life with fresh theatrical energy.

Described as a beautiful way to reconnect with stories that have been shared around fires for thousands of years, the production explores familiar constellations such as Orion, Pegasus, the Pleiades, Sirius and the Milky Way.

Storyteller and co-creator Daniel Morden said: “Stars and their Consolations is a way of restoring the night sky. When we listen to these myths, we are connecting with our ancestors. It is as if a hand has reached out from the past and taken our own, and we feel less alone.”

The two-hour show, suitable for ages 12 and over, invites audiences into an enthralling world where gods toy mercilessly with mortals, and stories of pride, lust and passion unfold against the vast canvas of the cosmos. The epic sweep of the sky, the creators say, offers a grounding and consoling perspective on human troubles.

Producer Naomi Wilds added: “Stories shared together bring people together. We all live under the same sky, though it looks different depending on where you stand. Star-related stories help us remember constellation patterns, mark the seasons and even warn us about issues such as light pollution. They remind us why the night sky is valuable, and why we must protect it for future generations.”

Six-month bilingual storytelling project across Wales

Ahead of the spring tour, Adverse Camber—supported by Prosiect Nos Partnership, Theatrau Sir Gâr, Arts Council Wales, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Colwinston Foundation, The Darkley Trust, Welsh Government, Literature Wales and People Speak Up—is launching a six-month initiative: Cysur y Sêr (The Comfort of the Stars).

This Welsh-led, bilingual project will develop new Welsh-language stories, explore the environmental impacts of light pollution and climate change, and leave a long-lasting storytelling legacy. Ten bilingual storytellers will work with communities near venues across Wales in the lead-up to Dark Skies Week in February 2026, before linking into the touring production in March and April.

Although Stars and their Consolations focuses on Greek mythology, the creative team emphasises that Wales itself has some of the best protected night skies in the world—and a largely forgotten tradition of celestial storytelling.

Morden noted: “The Welsh landscape used to be populated with stories. We’ve forgotten many of them—on the ground and in the heavens. If STARS helps make the night sky magical and precious again, perhaps we will do more to protect it.”

Dani Robertson, Dark Sky Officer for the Prosiect Nos Partnership, added:
“Interest in Dark Sky watching across Wales is growing. We suspect many of the star stories once told in rural and coastal communities have been lost, but Cysur y Sêr may uncover memories people still hold. Sharing them helps pass this knowledge on to the future.”

How to watch

Stars and their Consolations will appear at the Torch Theatre on Tuesday, 24 March.
For more information and tickets, visit www.torchtheatre.co.uk
or contact the Box Office on (01646) 695267.

Continue Reading

Community

St Davids lights up for annual Christmas tree and wreath contest

Published

on

Menevia WI, Girl Guides and local groups among the winners at a packed Cross Square event

CHARITIES, schools and community groups lit up St Davids on 29 November 2025, showcasing creativity, craftsmanship and festive spirit as hundreds gathered in Cross Square for the annual Christmas Tree and Wreath Competition.

The winners were chosen by public vote. Taking first place in the adults’ category was Menevia WI, whose extraordinary tree, nativity scene and decorations were ingeniously created from a clothes airer and wooden pegs.

Second place went to the City Council Coffee and Chat Group with a thoughtful Christmas-and-Remembrance design, featuring hand-knitted red, white and blue decorations. St Davids RNLI secured third with a lifeboat-themed tree celebrating their lifesaving work.

In the children’s category, St Davids Girl Guides took the top spot with a charming design featuring “Girl-Guide-ified” Santas, tents and the iconic Guide logo. Ysgol Penrhyn Dewi (YPD) came second with a colourful puzzle-themed tree carrying the message: “In this school you are a special piece of the puzzle.” Close behind in third place was Brawdy Hayscastle YFC with an inventive cow-themed Christmas tree.

The wreath category also highlighted the community’s talent. The Drifters claimed first place with a striking star-shaped wreath, while Lego Church secured second with a brilliantly crafted Lego design. Third place went to Rebecca Thornton for her beautifully knitted wreath featuring Santa and his reindeer.

As the Christmas lights were switched on and Cross Square filled with families, the event once again showcased the creativity and community spirit that make Wales’s smallest city shine at Christmas.

Continue Reading

Crime3 hours ago

Prosecution delivers powerful closing speech in Christopher Phillips trial

Jury expected to retire shortly in Swansea Crown Court baby abuse case THE TRIAL of Christopher Phillips, accused of inflicting...

Business21 hours ago

First wind turbine components arrive as LNG project moves ahead

THE FIRST ship carrying major components for Dragon LNG’s new onshore wind turbines docked at Pembroke Port last week, marking...

Crime1 day ago

Mother admits “terrible idea” to let new partner change her baby’s nappies alone

Court hears from timid mother who was barely audible in the witness box who said she carried out no checks...

Business2 days ago

Welsh Govt shifts stance on business rates after pressure from S4C and Herald

Ministers release unexpected statement 48 hours after widespread concern highlighted in Welsh media THE WELSH GOVERNMENT has announced a new...

Crime2 days ago

Pembroke rape investigation dropped – one suspect now facing deportation

DYFED-POWYS POLICE have closed an investigation into an alleged rape and false imprisonment in Pembroke after deciding to take no...

News2 days ago

Baby C trial: Mother breaks down in tears in the witness box

She tells jury Christopher Phillips repeatedly offered to babysit her seven-week-old son alone in weeks before life-changing injuries were discovered...

Crime3 days ago

Defendant denies using Sudocrem-covered finger to assault two-month-old baby

In dramatic day-long cross-examination, Christopher Phillips repeatedly denies sexual penetration, as prosecution alleges escalating anal attacks ended in catastrophic injury...

Business3 days ago

New Milford Haven pilot vessel successfully launched in the Netherlands

THE PORT OF MILFORD HAVEN’S new pilot vessel has reached a major milestone after being launched in the Netherlands, where...

Crime3 days ago

Plaques unveiled in Haverfordwest to honour HIV charity pioneer Terry Higgins

Two blue plaques mark the birthplace of the man whose death led to creation of Terrence Higgins Trust THE LIFE...

Crime3 days ago

Defendant denies causing injuries to two-month-old baby

Christopher Phillips explains “rattle” incident during questioning CHRISTOPHER PHILLIPS, the 28-year-old man accused of sexually assaulting and causing serious physical...

Popular This Week