Following the discovery of severe flaws in its maternity services, a struggling hospital trust claimed that improvements are ahead of schedule.
201 infant deaths were attributed to subpar care, according to Donna Ockenden's investigation into the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust (SaTH).
It provided 210 actions for the trust to complete, along with 15 recommendations.
The director of nursing reported that progress was "above trajectory" at a board meeting on Thursday.
According to a report written in advance of the board meeting, SaTH should have completed 113 of the actions by May 2023, but it only managed to provide evidence for 148 of them.
Additional 24 actions were listed as "delivered, not yet evidenced," while 38 were listed as "not yet delivered.".
The Ockenden report, which looked at SaTH's maternity practices over a 20-year period and was released in March 2022, found that the institution's failures also contributed to the deaths of nine mothers and resulted in permanent injuries for other infants.
SaTH has been working to enhance services ever since it revealed a "toxic culture" at the trust.
Executive director of nursing Hayley Flavell gave the board the progress report and noted that they were "above trajectory, which is really positive.".
The board was informed that the trust's maternity services do not currently have any open positions for staff members.