The National Nanny Association is deeply saddened by the recent death of a child in circumstances that have once again exposed serious gaps in the regulation of the nanny and maternity nurse sector.
Our thoughts are with the family at the heart of this devastating tragedy. No words can lessen the pain of such a loss.
However, this case raises urgent and unavoidable questions about how in-home childcare is currently structuredโand more importantly, how it is not.
A System Without Safeguards
The Senior Coroner in this case referred to the โpurported expertiseโ of untrained individuals, highlighting the risks posed when people present themselves as qualified childcare professionals without the necessary training, knowledge, or oversight.
This tragedy has been described as occurring within a โcomplete regulatory vacuum.โ
Unlike other areas of childcare provision, the nanny and maternity nurse sector in the UK remains largely unregulated. There is:
- No mandatory requirement for qualifications
- No compulsory training standards
- No universal requirement for DBS checks
- No single, recognised register of professionals
This means families are often left to navigate the process aloneโplacing trust in individuals without any consistent or enforceable framework to ensure safety.
A False Sense of Security
Many families assume that someone working in their home with their child is regulated in the same way as nursery staff, teachers, or childminders.
This is not the case.
While there are many highly skilled, experienced, and dedicated nannies and maternity nurses working across the UK, the absence of regulation allows individuals without appropriate training or understanding to enter the profession.
This creates a dangerous grey areaโone where โexperienceโ can be claimed but not verified, and where safeguarding knowledge is not guaranteed.
Why Regulation Matters
This is not about criticism of individuals. It is about creating a system that:
- Protects children
- Supports families in making informed decisions
- Upholds the professionalism of the sector
- Prevents avoidable harm
At the National Nanny Association, we have long been campaigning for meaningful reform.
We are calling for:
- Mandatory DBS checks for all nannies, maternity nurses, and in-home childcare providersย (sign our petition today)
- Minimum training and qualification standardsย across the sector
- The introduction of aย recognised national register
- Clear and enforceableย safeguarding and accountability frameworks
Without these measures, there remains a very real risk that tragedies like this could happen again.
Guidance for Families Now
While we continue to push for systemic change, there are steps families can take immediately to help keep their children safe.
We strongly encourage all parents and childcare professionals to follow safe sleep guidance from the The Lullaby Trust, which provides clear, evidence-based advice to reduce the risk of sudden infant death.
Families should also:
- Request and verify references
- Ensure a valid and up-to-date DBS check is in place
- Ask for evidence of relevant training (including first aid and Newborn care)
- Use reputable agencies or organisations where possible
Time for Change
This tragedy must not be dismissed as an isolated incident.
It is part of a wider, systemic issue that has gone unaddressed for too long.
Children deserve to be safe.
Families deserve to be protected.
Professionals deserve a recognised and respected framework.
Regulation is not optionalโit is essential.
We invite everyone to read more about our Road to Regulation campaign and to sign our petition for mandatory DBS checks to help protect children across the UK.
The National Nanny Association will continue to campaign for change until meaningful safeguards are in place.