The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

We must end this postcode lottery of care and treatment

- BY LIZZIE D’ANGELO RESEARCH AND POLICY DIRECTOR, TOMMY’S

At least one in six women will experience miscarriag­e, possibly as many as one in four. Yet if you look around your groups of friends, how many experience­s do you know about?

Miscarriag­e is still a taboo subject for the majority of people. It’s uncomforta­ble, deeply personal, heart-breaking, and often traumatic. Despite being so common, it is isolating. It affects women, men, whole families. The grief and psychologi­cal impact of miscarriag­e is often poorly understood, both by society and by healthcare profession­als. The loss is often minimised by the view that a pregnancy before 12 weeks “just wasn’t meant to be”. This must change and that is why we are delighted to support the campaign being launched today.

At Tommy’s, we know that losing a baby isn’t “just one of those things”. We’re working tirelessly to reduce the UK’s unacceptab­le rates of miscarriag­e, stillbirth and premature birth.

Sadly, it’s not always possible to give a reason why a miscarriag­e happened – which can make the loss even harder to bear, as parents often blame themselves. In 2016, Tommy’s opened the first national centre dedicated to miscarriag­e research, to find answers for families, undertakin­g studies to develop new and better tests and treatments for early pregnancy loss.

Currently, women must usually experience three miscarriag­es before they’re referred for consultant-led care – so the message many women receive after traumatic losses is that they’ll have to lose another baby before it will be investigat­ed.

Even after referral, the care they access will differ from hospital to hospital. Miscarriag­e services vary greatly in quality and accessibil­ity, and in parts of Scotland there is no miscarriag­e support at all. Miscarriag­e care is a postcode lottery – this is unacceptab­le and must change.

Women must receive appropriat­e, personalis­ed care during and after miscarriag­e and treatment must be standardis­ed across the country. We must also collect data to record the national miscarriag­e rate to fully understand the whole problem.

Jemma, who was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder after experienci­ng three miscarriag­es, told us: “There’s not a day that goes by where I don’t wonder what they’d have looked like, what they would’ve achieved. My continued mental health issues could have been prevented, had I received proper after care and support.”

Sadly, stories like Jemma’s, like Shona’s, like Nadia’s, like Julie’s, are sadly not unique.

They must no longer be the norm.

 ??  ?? Lizzie D’Angelo
Lizzie D’Angelo

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