From preconception to breastfeeding: Co-Creating weightinclusive care with womenand healthcare providers: The RADIANT Study
Thank you to the women and maternity care providers who took part in the first phase of the RADIANT study. We are now analysing all of ideas and experiences people shared, with reports coming soon. In the next phase of the study, we’re developing Best Practice Principles for Weight Inclusive Maternity Care. If you’d like to be part of our national consensus building process, please click on the button below to find out more.
Co-creating Best Practice Principles for Weight Inclusive Maternity Care
Maternity care providers attitudes and beliefs towards weight and body size: A cross sectional survey [The MatCARES study]
Mat-CARES was a survey of midwives, obstetricians and general practitioners across Australia and New Zealand about their weight-stigma attitudes and beliefs. The survey has now been completed and we’ve started sharing the findings of this study – see ‘Spreading the word’ below.


Our Chief Investigators Prof Leonie Callaway and Associate Professor Lauren Kearney both work with Queensland's Metro North Hosptial and Health Service. These connections with health services are vital to ensuring the Body Positive Birth program of research actually leads to change in maternity services.
This article documents Ashley's experience of fat-shaming in maternity care. RADIANT Chief Investigator, Dr Bec Jenkinson was also interviewed by 9Honey for this article.
Written by members of our Lived Experience Expert Group, with Cheif Investigator Dr Bec Jenkinson, and published in the world leading midwifery journal, Women and Birth, this discussion paper documents consumer concerns that the current weight-centric approach to maternity care is creating unintended harm for pregnant, birthing and postnatal women. As a group, the authors have lived experience of hospital birth and homebirth, continuity of care and fragmented care models, waterbirth, induction of labour, caesarean birth, pregnancy loss and stillbirth. They share the common, unwelcome experience of weight stigma in maternity care, which remains one of the few unchallenged sources of bias and discrimination both in society generally and healthcare more specifically. In this article, the authors weave their lived experiences into a call for change in maternity care.
Brisbane GP, Dr Jess van den Heuval, is part of our broader Body Positive Birth team. Jess has been doing a study about weight stigma attitudes and beliefs amongst Australian GPs. In August 2024, Jess (ably assisted by her baby) presented her work Australasian Association for Academic Primary Care Conference in Sydney. Jess's study found that GPs are disastisifed with the traditional weight centric approach to maternity care, and keen to evolve their approach to focus on actual clinical outcomes (not weight in isolation). However, GPs also need quality reference materials and support to do that.
On Wed 19 June, RADIANT Chief Investgator Prof Leonie Callaway gave an invited presentation as part of the Mercy Perinatal Twilight Seminar Series. This seminar series is very popular and respected amongst medical and midwifery professionals, and attracted a great audience. After her presentation, Leonie joined a panel discussion with two other speakers. A recording of the webinar is available, please contact us if you would like to access the recording.
RADIANT Investigators, Bec, Lauren and Ahlia travelled to Christchurch, New Zealand to attend the Annual Congress of the Perinatal Societey of Australia and New Zealand. We presented a poster, entitled "Using photovoice to understand larger bodied women’s experiences of maternity care", to share the results of the pilot work that led to the RADIANT study. The poster was awarded "Best of the Best" and we were invited to give a short oral presentation as well. 








