Last Modified: 3:27pm 14/08/2023
Ward 9
Welcome to Ward 9
We are located in the green zone of the hospital on level 2. We provide care for birthing partners before and after childbirth.
Visiting hours are from 08.00 – 22.00, two visitors at a time.
Meal times: hot and cold meals are provided for service users at any time of the day (including outside of usual mealtimes). There is also a variety of hot and cold drinks and snacks available 24 hours a day. The maternity support workers will provide you with menu options for you to choose your meals in advance.
We are always looking to improve our services and we appreciate any feedback we receive, please take the time to tell us about your care.
Watch this video to familiarise yourself with what the unit looks like.
How to get to us:
This short video will show you how to get to Ward 9 from the main entrance of the hospital.
Visiting:
One birth partner can visit between the hours of 8am and 10pm.
Please note, visiting restrictions may change at short notice due to operational pressures and/or the number of Covid-19 patients in the hospital.
MKUH has partnered with AccessAble in order to provide a detailed access guide for the public. This guide lets you know what access will be available when you visit our hospital and services. In order to find out more about the route you will use for Ward 9 please follow this link: https://www.accessable.co.uk
The Ward Managers on this ward are:

Faye Davies

Ellen Okoth
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Visiting hours
Additional Information
For more visitor information, including restaurants, shops, and car parking, click here.
Staff
Imaging
Maternity
- Feeling your baby move
- Corticosteriods in pregnancy
- Birthing partners staying overnight
- Gestational Diabetes mellitus
- Assisted vaginal birth (ventouse or forceps)
- Meet the Maternity Team
- Staying comfortable during labour
- Epidural – Your Choice
- TB, BCG and your baby
- Screening tests for you and your baby (STFYAYB)
- Perinatal Mental Health
- Breech Presentation – What are your choices?
- Reducing the risk of pre-eclampsia – Information for women taking aspirin in pregnancy
- Down’s, Edward’s & Patau’s syndromes screening
- Monitoring your Baby’s Heartbeat in Labour
- Fetal Anomaly Screening Programme Handbook
- The Early Pregnancy Assessment Unit (EPAU)
- Illness in newborn babies
- Planning your birth
- Coronavirus: Parent information for newborn babies
- Use of water in labour and birth
- Postnatal Community Care
- HIV and Pregnancy – You and Your Baby
- GDm-Health
- Caring for your wound after having a caesarean section
- Outpatient Induction of Labour
- Induction of Labour
- Home Blood Pressure Monitoring in Pregnancy
- Newborn Feeding Policy Summary
- Perineal Care
- Feeding your baby during a hospital admission
- Antenatal Day Assessment Unit (ADAU)
- NHS Fetal Anomaly Screening Programme
- Blood Groups and Red Cell Antibodies in Pregnancy
- Birth Reflections
- Understanding why your baby died
- Gestational diabetes using the GDmHealth App
- Pregnancy information for women with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes
- Vitamin K for Newborn Babies
- Pethidine Injection for homebirths
- Loss of Your Baby – Neonatal – Guidance for parents
- Late Miscarriage or Termination of Pregnancy for Medical Reasons – Guidance for parents
- Stillbirth or Termination of Pregnancy (over 24 weeks) – Guidance for parents
- Tongue Tie Division to Improve Breastfeeding
- How to take your blood pressure at home using an upper arm monitor
- Suspected Pulmonary Embolism in Pregnant Women
- Antenatal Colostrum Collection
- A guide to starting insulin for women with gestational diabetes
- Early pregnancy scan
- Anomaly Scan Information
- Back and Pelvic Girdle Pain in Pregnancy Advice and Exercise
- Home birth at MKUH
Neonatal Unit
Pain Management
Physiotherapy