
Improving maternity care for victims of slavery
The Clewer Initiative
The University of Nottingham Rights Lab has funded a scoping review (Borrelli et al., 2023) to map the available evidence and resources on maternity care provision and non-statutory support to pregnant women and mothers affected by modern slavery.
The scoping review discovered that:
- There were barriers to care and entitlements - many mothers were unfamiliar with and lacked access to systems and information.
- Pregnant mothers faced ongoing threats of violence from partners/traffickers, restricted ability to move freely, issues related to traumatisation, dispersal, and dealing with multiple new systems.
- There is a lack of training and understanding of how optimal care and support during maternity should be provided by healthcare professionals and non-statutory service staff.
Further research is needed from which recommendations for good maternity practice and effective intersection between statutory and non-statutory services can be supported and mobilised across different systems and settings.
A team of maternity, mental health and modern slavery researchers, survivor mothers, and staff supporting modern slavery victims/survivors are seeking funding to carry this out. Organisations involved are the University of Nottingham (School of Health Sciences), the Rights Lab and Causeway, with the support of a wide network of third sector agencies.

If funded, the project will aim to
a) understand HOW optimal care and support can be provided for survivor mothers and their babies;
b) develop recommendations and resources for different constituencies (healthcare professionals, non-statutory services staff and mothers);
c) disseminate and integrate resources into existing systems and platforms.
To read the review in full click here
To find out more, contact the researchers Sara Borrelli or Helen Spiby