International Midwifery
Midwifery

Working as a Midwife

Midwives in the UK work independently. You are responsible for a labouring mother, with doctors only present in high-risk cases. However, Midwives also work closely alongside a diverse multi-disciplinary care team, including Obstetricians, Theatre Technicians, Healthcare Support Workers, and Psychiatric Nurses.

You will need excellent communication skills and the ability to speak up for their patients’ best interests when appropriate. This role will be a 360-midwifery role including aspects of pre-natal, labour and delivery and post-natal care.

While most births take place in hospital, most of the care given to mother and baby before and after the birth takes places out in the community. Midwives work in both settings.

 

Become a Midwife today

If you are interested in applying for roles in the UK from overseas, please complete an application today. Someone from our recruitment team will be in touch soon with more information.

Midwives in the UK practice under the Nursing and Midwifery Council’s (NMC) Code of Conduct to ensure they meet all professional, legal, and ethical requirements for working in the NHS. The code states that midwives must always follow four key proficiencies: prioritise people, practice effectively, preserve safety and promote professionalism and trust.

Midwives are in a unique position to support mother and baby and so they need excellent communication skills and the ability to speak up for their patients’ best interests when appropriate.

They have a legal responsibility to keep up to date with current knowledge and maintain clinical supervision. The NHS offers a wide range of training and development options to support this.

Specific duties include:

  • Monitor and examine women and their babies during pregnancy
  • Assess, plan, implement and evaluate patient care plans and labour plans
  • Provide care to pregnant mothers, including regular screening in line with national initiatives
  • Provide antenatal care, including screening tests providing appropriate guidance and support to parents
  • Referring cases to Doctors and the wider care team as appropriate
  • Provide and deliver parenting and health education
  • Offer support and counselling for events such as miscarriage, termination, stillbirth, neonatal abnormality and neonatal death
  • Support and assist mothers in labour, monitoring both their condition and that of the baby 
  • Administer medication utilising knowledge pain management
  • Give support and advice on the care of the new-born baby, including breastfeeding, bathing, sleep bereavement, safeguarding, sonography and diabetes specialities
  • Respond to emergencies and changing patient situations
  • Participate in the training and supervision of junior colleagues

Midwives work in hospital and community settings, generally working shifts over seven days of the week, including day and night duty and on-call rotas. Some 60% of Midwives (and Nurses) work 12-hour shifts, usually from 7am to 7pm, or 7pm to 7am. There are also options to work more flexibly by joining staff ‘banks’ operated by NHS Professionals and NHS Trusts themselves.

They are independent practitioners with responsibility for a labouring mother, with doctors only present in high-risk cases. However, they also work closely alongside a diverse multi-disciplinary care team, including Obstetricians, Theatre Technicians, Healthcare Support Workers, and Mental Health Nurses.

Normally, Midwives will be appointed to a specific role within a ward, clinical unit, or community care centre. There also opportunities to ‘rotate’ to other wards for a period of time. In general, Midwives provide care before, during and after birth, but they can also specialise in areas like neonatal care, fertility care, breast feeding consultancy and infant screening.

The basic pay for a registered Midwife in the UK ranges from £28,407 - £35,392 a year, for a 37.5-hour week.

Anyone who is trained outside the UK and wants to work as Midwife in the NHS must register with the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC). Before this stage, applicants need to successfully complete a two-part application process which includes a Computer-Based Test and an objective structured clinical exam (OSCE).

Overseas Midwives must also meet the English language standard set by the NMC.