Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 387, Issue 10018, 6–12 February 2016, Pages e16-e18
The Lancet

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Stillbirths in sub-Saharan Africa: unspoken grief

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Cited by (31)

  • Provider Perceptions on Bereavement Following Newborn Death: A Qualitative Study from Ethiopia and Ghana

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    Our study adds to this literature by addressing the viewpoints and practices of the individuals providing care to infants and families in these settings, and highlighting the essential element of psychosocial support when newborn death is anticipated or has occurred. Globally, there has been increased recognition of the importance of psychosocial support for families and a call for increased research.17,18 Providers in this study uniformly described cultural and contextual barriers that limited their ability to communicate effectively with grieving families and to provide emotional support following newborn death.

  • ‘There is trauma all round’: A qualitative study of health workers’ experiences of caring for parents after stillbirth in Kenya and Uganda

    2023, Women and Birth
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    In LMICs, debilitating physical morbidity related to traumatic birth, including obstetric fistula may also amplify these effects. Stillbirth is also associated with wider negative social sequelae including increased health care costs and lost economic productivity [5]. Alongside stillbirth prevention ‘ensuring appropriate bereavement support for parents and families when a baby dies’ was recognised as a key WHO/UNICEF priority [1].

  • “Getting it right when it goes wrong – Effective bereavement care requires training of the whole maternity team”

    2022, Best Practice and Research: Clinical Obstetrics and Gynaecology
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    Recent systematic reviews of care after stillbirth across low-, middle-, and high-income settings have revealed that care immediately after and following stillbirth is inconsistent, variable, and often deficient [36,45]. In some of the high-income countries (HICs), national guidelines and care pathways exist for bereaved women but, paradoxically, hardly any exist in LMICs where the burden is the greatest [46]. The RESPECT (Research of Evidence based Stillbirth care Principles to Establish global consensus on respectful Treatment) study set out to address the need to establish a global consensus for perinatal bereavement care in an effort to reduce the enormous psychosocial burden on families and to reduce the known inequities in the quality of care received following [47].

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