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Woman's Hour

Weekend Woman’s Hour: Bishop Rose Hudson-Wilkin, Corridor care, The Mare, AI & IVF, Adwaith

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Personal Journals

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 18 January 2025

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Right Reverend Rose Hudson-Wilkin, the Bishop of Dover, is a trailblazer, who has been right at the heart of a changing nation for over 40 years. Despite discrimination due to her gender and ethnic minority background, Bishop Rose has never wavered from the call she received to enter ministry at the age of 14. She joined Nuala McGovern to discuss her memoir, The Girl from Montego Bay.

A Royal College of Nursing report, On the Frontline of the UK's Corridor Care Crisis, which came out this week, found that the situation in A&E is the worst it has ever been and that a lack of hospital beds means corridor care has been "normalised". One nurse described caring for a 95-year-old woman dying with dementia who had spent eight hours lying on a trolley in a crowded corridor next to a drunk person who was vomiting and being abusive. Others describe women having a miscarriage in side rooms. Professor Nicola Ranger, Chief Executive of the Royal College of Nursing joined Anita Rani to discuss what is going on.

Holly Bourne, bestselling author of How Do You Like Me Now? and the Spinster Club series, is back with So Thrilled For You, her most personal novel yet. It’s a story about four friends navigating motherhood, career ambition, and societal pressures, all unfolding during a sweltering summer’s day at a baby shower. Holly joined Nuala and explained what inspired this book.

Can AI improve the success rates of women undergoing fertility treatment? Anita discusses the impact of AI on IVF with Dr Cristina Hickman, an embryologist, co-founder of Avenues, and Chair of the Global AI Fertility Society, and Dr Ali Abbara, a Clinician Scientist at Imperial College London, and Consultant in Reproductive Endocrinology at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.

Hermine Braunsteiner was the first person to be extradited from the US for Nazi war crimes. She was one of a few thousand women who had worked as a concentration camp guard and was nicknamed ‘the Mare’ by prisoners because of her cruelty; she kicked people to death. In 1964, Hermine’s past was unknown: She was living a quiet existence as an adoring suburban housewife in Queens, New York when she was tracked down by a reporter from The New York Times who exposed her past. Angharad Hampshire, a Research Fellow at York St John University, joined Nuala to talk about The Mare, her novel based on Hermine’s life.

The all-female, Welsh-language, post-punk trio Adwaith are the only band to have won the Welsh Music Prize twice, for their first two albums. They are about to release their third album, Solas, all about returning to their hometown in Carmarthen. Band members Hollie Singer, Gwenedd Owen and Gwen Anthony performed live in the studio.

Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Annette Wells Editor: Rebecca Myatt

Transcript

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0:00.0

Before you listen to this BBC podcast, I'd like to quickly tell you about some others.

0:05.2

My name's Andy Martin and I'm the editor of a team of podcast producers at the BBC in Northern Ireland.

0:11.3

It's a job I really love because we get to tell the stories that really matter to people here,

0:16.3

but which also resonate and apply to listeners around the world.

0:19.6

And because the team is such a diverse

0:21.2

range of skills and strengths, we have trained journalists, people who love digging through

0:26.0

archives, we've got drama and even comedy experts. We really can do those stories justice. So if

0:31.8

you like this podcast, head to BBC Sounds where you'll find plenty more fascinating stories

0:37.1

from all around the UK. BBC Sounds where you'll find plenty more fascinating stories from all around the UK.

0:40.3

BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts.

0:44.2

Hello, I'm Anita Rani and welcome to Woman's Hour from BBC Radio 4.

0:49.1

Just to say that for rights reasons, the music in the original radio broadcast has been removed for this podcast.

0:56.0

Welcome to Weekend Woman's Hour with me, Anita Rani. On today's program, a woman that some say

1:01.4

could be the next Archbishop of Canterbury, the right Reverend Rose Hudson Wilkin, the Bishop

1:07.1

of Dover, on her extraordinary life. The author Holly Bourne, whose new book follows

1:11.8

four best friends who find their relationships on shaky ground as children are introduced to their

1:17.6

lives. Also, a report out this week surveyed 5,000 nurses in the past four weeks and revealed

1:23.9

some shocking truths about their experiences within hospitals, particularly in A&E.

1:29.8

And the novel based on a horrifying real-life story of a woman who was a guard in Nazi female concentration camps.

1:37.4

It explores how an ordinary woman could descend so quickly into evil.

1:42.3

And music from the post-punk band, Adwif, who sing in their native Welsh. Lots to get through, so let into evil. And music from the post-punk band Adweith, who sing in their native Welsh.

1:46.6

Lots to get through, so let's begin.

...

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