All Aboard the Love Boat? The Royal Navy & Pregnancies at sea
Life in the Royal Navy is less about preparing for war, and more
like spending time on the loveboat. That
seems to be the gist of quite a few stories in the media today which breathlessly
relate to the news that since 2005 35 women sailors from 18 different ships
have been airlifted to shore as a result of becoming pregnant and discovering
this while they were at sea.
This news has been met with shock and horror by some commentators
online, some of which seem rather in the 'internet hardman' school. At least one Daily Mail reader
suggested that Chasity belts should form part of naval uniform for female
members of the naval service (presumably in the RN kit record book it would be
recorded as a ‘Torpedo Protection Belt’?).
Is the nation being let down by a bunch of serial shaggers in
uniform or is perhaps the truth of the matter a little more complex than originally
conceived?
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Type 45 at sea- Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
The specific FOI that was referred to in the article, which
looks like it originated in the Daily
Star (alongside another story suggesting that the 2003
Iraq war occurred due to Saddam possessing ‘stargate’ technology and the US
and allies wanting to prevent various aliens attacking the Earth) asked for the
total number of females aeromedically evacuated between 2005 and 2019.
Confusingly though there is also some suggestion that the Sun also got the
story as an exclusive – to be honest, its rather hard to tell.
To start with, a sense of context is perhaps useful. This
FOI is a well worn question which seems to have been asked quite a few times
over the years. Humphrey has found similar articles from 2015
and 2017
and 2018,
so its not exactly breaking news that the RN has had to occasionally return
sailors ashore when they find out they are pregnant.
The numbers involved sound dramatic – a whole 35 women flown
at public expense due to getting pregnant. In 2015 the number was 25, so in the
last four years a whole 10 additional women sailors have discovered they were
pregnant while onboard a ship.
Given that the Royal Navy consists of about 3,000 women at
any one time (roughly 10% of the Naval Service) and that each year roughly 3000
people join the Royal Navy (lets assume 300 women based on the above figure),
then in very big handfuls between 2005 and 2019 roughly 7500 women have served
in the Royal Navy at different times. The figure is likely to be even higher
still, but it’s a useful, albeit very rough, ‘guesstimate’.
This means that of the 7500 women, a total of 35 have
discovered they were pregnant while at sea during this period. That works out
at, roughly, 0.5% of the total force spread over 14 years. This doesn’t sound
quite as dramatic as first made out to be.
The second point to note is that this is spread across quite
a lot of ships over a wide period. These ships were at different points in
their operational cycles, and no distinction is made between the individual at
sea during a weeks training for FOST, or the individual airlifted ashore while
in the Gulf.
While the papers are getting terribly excited about the fact
that HMS DUNCAN, now deployed in the Middle East had someone lifted ashore,
this discovery probably has had less impact than they may think – MOD
statistics suggest that the airlift occurred at some point between 2012 and
2016 – which would imply that her current deployment is probably not affected,
unless the RAF air transport force is even more delayed than usual…
The reason that the RN medically evacuates pregnant women
from a ship is that a warship is inherently not a particularly great working
environment to be pregnant in. Not only is it a working routine that could be
tiring and challenging (for example doing defence watches of 6hrs on, 6hrs off),
but it also impacts on the ability of the individual to do their job. For
example could a pregnant woman safely be part of a firefighting or damage
control party? From a very practical position, the ships feeding system isn’t
geared up for pregnant women, nor are the right medical checks and support
available onboard, and as anyone who has slept in the top bunk of a 3 berth will
know, climbing in and out is a challenge at the best of times, and space is
rather limited. Being pregnant and living on a messdeck would be less than optimal.
The Royal Navy takes its duty of care to its personnel
seriously, and will take appropriate steps to land them ashore when the
circumstances require it. For those so interested, the RN regulations for doing
this can be found HERE.
It is incredibly common to find circumstances where
personnel need to return home or ashore as a result of ailments, illnesses or
changes to their health. Being pregnant is not the sole reason that the RN
conducts aeromedical evacuation, and it is important to realise that this is
not a case of ‘special treatment’.
It is far better to get someone who discovers they are
pregnant ashore and then enable them to get the right help and support, and
also move them to a shore job where they can prepare to take leave in due
course. From an administration perspective, it also enables the system to find
a replacement and send them out (if deemed necessary), to cover the gap that
has emerged.
While the comments may be ones of shock and suggestions that
somehow all the sailors are shagging merrily away while at sea, it is actually
entirely likely that many of these cases had little to do with any boarding actions
onboard. Ships in home waters will often be at sea on a weekly basis, allowing
time for weekend leave to be spent with family. Other ships on deployment will
usually have some form of standdown allowing the crew to take 2 weeks leave.
It is not beyond the realm of possibility for someone to go
on weekend leave, or mid tour leave, have a very good leave and return to the
ship without knowing they were pregnant. It is also possible that biology could
play a part here too – not every woman knows or realises they are pregnant – as
the US
Navy sailor onboard the USS EISENHOWER found when she unexpectedly gave
birth while at sea in 2016 while the ship was conducting air strikes against
ISIS.
The final point to note is that aeromedical evacuation
sounds like the ship going to flying stations and the brave helicopter pilot is
forced out of his bunk and bundled into the cockpit to fly to shore. In fact
the usual stock FOI query (and they all do seem to follow a certain pattern)
asks about aeromedical evacuation and not whether the women where aeromedically
evacuated from the ship itself.
It could well be the case that some women were flown to shore
by helicopter and landed in the UK. But equally it could be the case that they
went ashore when the ship came into port and flew home on an RAF flight – which
would then be considered an ‘aeromedical evacuation’. To the MOD an ‘aeromedical
evacuation’ involves ‘the medically supervised movement of patients to, and
between medical facilities by air transportation’. Its worth carefully reading the FOI answers to
note the heavy caveating in defining the circumstances in question. The key
phrase in the FOI is ‘returned at the first convenient opportunity’.
Some may worry about the cost, but by 2017 the MOD had
estimated that the average cost per head of each evacuation was £631.98 – by this
sum, we can work out that between 2005 and 2019 the MOD has spent about £22,000
on landing pregnant women ashore. In the same time frame it will have spent the
best part of £500 Billion on Defence as a whole.
The reality is that if you recruit a workforce where many of
the people are younger and sexually active and of childbearing age, then the
chances are that you’ll get the odd pregnancy. What matters is not the fact
that women got pregnant, but the fact that the MOD strives to put their safety
and welfare first. This is about being a responsible employer, and is not in
anyway an acceptable reason to suggest that women do not belong at sea.
There is a quite unpleasant undertone here in some of the
online comments from sexist dinosaurs, who cannot cope with the idea that women
serve as equals at sea, and that there is some kind of dreadful set up here. It
is apparently awful that a woman can fall pregnant and only discover it when at
sea and the sooner these people are taken off ships, which can go back to being
manly ships for manly men, carrying Jack and his often STI afflicted genitals
from port to port the better for the nation as a whole. These views rightly
deserve to go the way of the dinosaurs for, unlike women, they have no place in
the modern Royal Navy.
Yes, they are.
ReplyDeleteGet off here Ianeon if you can't (1) accept that Women are equal and serve as such in the Royal Navy, and (2) accept that the Royal Navy has by far the best trained Sailors of ANY Navy, and prove it on a daily basis all over the World, wherever they are deployed.
ReplyDeleteYes they are, the fact of the matter is women get pregnant, end of.....
ReplyDeleteWell said, laneon
ReplyDelete" accept that the Royal Navy has by far the best trained Sailors of ANY Navy, and prove it on a daily basis all over the World, wherever they are deployed."
stuck & Abusing the past to cover for the uncomfortable present
the French army was also considered best in the world until it just wasn't
Cohen, your point seems to be that sometimes something that's really good then becomes less good. Well done. Here's a gold star for stating the fucking obvious, you chump.
ReplyDeleteDo you have anything to say apart from irrelevant observations of the obvious? Maybe you could read the article, and some of the other posts on this site, and see if you have anything to say about the actual subject matter.
Because 99.5% of the time they're NOT pregnant? I can't believe I have to spell this out for you.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDelete“I don’t know of any great power in history that lost its foothold or decayed because of external reasons; internal social dysfunction was to blame."
irrelevant,eh?
The Inca empire was one of the world's great empires, then it encountered the Spanish conquistadors (and Western diseases) and it collapsed. Not hard to find examples if you look.
ReplyDeleteSome people cannot fathom how the birds and bees work it seems. Laneon sounds like some of the 3 badge parrots I had to manage, women are great, I used to work with them etc, etc, but they shouldn't be out of the house. Thankfully across the public sector women have been treated as equals, and paid accordingly for many years.
ReplyDeleteI wonder what the numbers of other medical issue fly offs are between the sexes?
I've been involved in a few ship to ship casevacs and they have all been for males, should we remove men from warships too?
It's certainly true that more people get helicoptered home because of injury than pregnancy; therefore, with Laneon's logic, we should refuse to allow anyone who might get injured to go to sea. Which is everyone. Great plan, Laneon, shut down the navy entirely. Did you think of that yourself?
DeleteCohen; massively irrelevant, and also not true. Many great powers in history decay because external forces damage them. Perhaps your carer should take away your keyboard for a while.
ReplyDelete