Coroners in England and Wales may be given new powers to investigate stillbirths, so that each baby death is independently assessed.
The government is consulting on the move to help bereaved parents gain answers on what went wrong and why and to help prevent more baby deaths.
Nine babies are stillborn every day in the UK. That's one in every 225 births, although rates have been going down.
In many cases, doctors are unable to tell parents why their baby died.
Currently, coroners can hold inquests only for babies who have shown signs of life after being born.
When a pregnancy that appeared to be healthy ends in stillbirth, the hospital caring for the mother will investigate.
A safety investigation body funded by the Department of Health and Social Care may look into it too.
While many parents are satisfied with existing processes, some have raised concerns about the inconsistency of investigations and have called for a more transparent and independent system.
Under the proposed new system that ministers are consulting on:
- Coroners in England and Wales would have powers to investigate all full-term stillbirths, occurring from 37 weeks pregnancy
- They would not have to gain consent or permission from any third party in exercising this power
- The coroner would consider whether any lessons could be learned
- Their investigations would not replace current investigations by the hospital or NHS agencies
The joint consultation, from the Ministry of Justice and the Department for Health and Social Care, wants to hear a wide range of views, from bereaved parents and the organisations that support them, as well as health professionals.
Health Minister Jackie Doyle-Price said: "We want to do everything we can to make pregnancy safer, bRead More – Source
[contf] [contfnew]
BBC
[contfnewc] [contfnewc]