¸ŁŔűĽ§

08 December 2025

It should not matter where in the country a woman gives birth. Nor should her background. A new research centre is therefore being set up, to contribute to making the entire care chain for expectant and new mothers more equal and based on their individual needs.

“Today it matters where in Sweden you give birth. Women receive different care depending on location when it comes to how much intervention such as surgery, labour-inducing drip and the like is the norm where they are. This is unacceptable,” says Marie Blomberg, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at LiU, and senior physician at the women’s clinic at Linköping University Hospital.

Gravida kvinnor i ett rum. AndreyPopov
The goal of MAMA research centre is that every woman, regardless of background, during and after pregnancy, should receive safe care based on research and adapted to her needs.
She is project manager for the new MAMA research hub at Linköping University, launched thanks to a SEK 67 million grant from the Swedish government research funding agency Forte. The funding runs for six years, with the possibility of a further four-year extension. The goal: that every woman, regardless of background, during and after pregnancy, should receive safe care based on research and adapted to her needs.

“The woman does not think about her care based on how the healthcare system is organised, where antenatal care is one part and childbirth care is another; she often sees it as an unbroken chain. In this research, we intend to follow the woman’s path just as she experiences it,” says Marie Blomberg.

Praised but unequal care

Swedish antenatal health and childbirth care has been praised for good results. However, there are many inequalities and variations as regards access to evidence-based care depending on region and the woman’s socio-economic status and country of origin. Antenatal care is based on a standard programme where all pregnant women are called to the same number of appointments. Aftercare is structured in the same way. This may seem fair, but is problematic in reality, according to Marie Blomberg.

“This praxis has been the same for a very long time, but the population has changed a lot in the meantime. Some may need a lot of medical care, while others may not. Healthcare has a limited pot of money, and we believe that resources can be used much better. To change this, different antenatal care programmes focusing on the individual woman’s needs must be tested,” says Marie Blomberg. “They need to be tested to make sure that we provide safe care and that the women are happy with them, and the best programmes will then be used.”

Health risks later in life

There have also been medical advances. Today, it is clear that certain complications during pregnancy, such as pre-eclampsia and diabetes, increase women’s risk of cardiovascular disease later in life. However, post-natal care does not capture this.

“There’s so much more the health care system could for this group of women, in terms of prevention.”

The MAMA research centre will address these extensive challenges to make change possible. The research is based on close collaboration between academia and healthcare, and brings together expertise from various fields, such as the care of pregnant women and unborn children, and childbirth care (obstetrics), public health, heart diseases (cardiology), nutrition and social sciences. The researchers involved come from Linköping University, Region Östergötland and Karolinska Institutet.

Change is the goal

The long-term support from Forte provides much better conditions than shorter initiatives, according to Marie Blomberg, as resources in the form of healthcare professionals can be freed, and these are given the opportunity to combine their work with research.

A woman in a white lab coat standing in a dental room. Magnus Johansson
Marie Blomberg, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology.

“We’ve gathered a team that is absolutely fantastic and everyone contributes different skills. It’s really exciting that we will tackle questions that are difficult to answer, but this is absolutely necessary to achieve change. With this team, I think we can do it and then we’ll make a big difference.”

Researchers in the research programme

MAMA Research hub

Latest news from LiU

En kvinna står i snön framför ett batterilager.

The battle for power – who has the right to our electricity?

Wind farms rising like the Eiffel Tower, data centres consuming as much power as entire regions and municipalities feeling like pawns in a global game. The large-scale investments  are creating conflict:  who has priority access to our electricity?

A man and a woman shaking hands in front of a statue.

New AI partnership strengthens the region

The AI Academy Partnership Program at ¸ŁŔűĽ§ will support companies and organisations in developing the skills needed to use AI effectively. The first partner in this new form of collaboration is Länsförsäkringar Östgöta.

En grupp människor står på ett trädäck.

Molecular medicine research secures long-term funding

The Wallenberg Centre for Molecular Medicine (WCMM) at LiU has been granted extended funding until 2039 by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. This makes it possible to build on ten years of success and to recruit new physician-scientists.