The Scotsman

Amazon urged to ban home doppler sales

● Claim devices can give false reading to expectant mothers and are not safe

- Newsdeskts@scotsman.com

By ANGUS HOWARTH

If a pregnant women is concerned about her baby and uses one, she may incorrectl­y detect her own heart rate and not seek timely medical advice.

“We hear stories from many mums who have sadly lost their baby after they delayed seeking medical attention because they had been reassured after hearing their baby’s heartbeat,” Kicks Count chief executive Elizabeth Hutton said.

“Foetal dopplers are complex pieces of medical equipment and should not be available to the general public.

“We are calling on these heavyweigh­t organisati­ons to do the right thing.”

The call comes as charities prepare to mark Baby Loss Awareness Week.

A coalition of 60 charities working to prevent baby deaths and pregnancy loss have called for better bereavemen­t care for parents across the UK.

It called on all health bodies to adopt a new programme, the National Bereavemen­t Care Pathway, to make sure families who had experience­d loss were given the best support possible.

The standards include giving parents the opportunit­y to spend time with their babies, a dedicated bereavemen­t room, and bereavemen­t care training for all staff who have contact with grieving parents. 0 Prof Robert Winston warned over the risk of miscarriag­e

Dr Clea Harmer, chief executive of the stillbirth and neonatal death charity Sands, said: “Bereavemen­t care for anyone who has suffered a miscarriag­e or pregnancy loss or the death of a baby must get better and we believe we have the solution.

“The rollout of the National Bereavemen­t Care Pathway for pregnancy and baby loss is a crucial step towards ensuring that all health profession­als in the UK can provide excellent bereavemen­t care. I urge all NHS trusts and health boards to adopt the Pathway and ensure care around baby loss is offered in line with these standards.”

A British fertility charity Genesis Research Trust has meanwhile warned the causes of baby loss are “underresea­rched”.

Professor Robert Winston, chairman and founder of the charity, said: “In over 40 years of my profession­al life I have never felt more at a loss than when confronted by a grieving mother and father who have just seen their dead baby.

“Their grief is unbearable when I have had to explain that we do not know yet why it happened.

“Genesis Research has helped reduce the incidence of baby loss, but it is still too common and our scientists work on improving our understand­ing of the cause of such tragedies.”

Genesis Research trustee Prof Phillip Bennett said: “Miscarriag­e is a very, very underresea­rched area and yet it’s so common.

“In reality up to a fourth of conception­s will miscarry. We understand some of what causes miscarriag­e, but not all of what causes miscarriag­e and we are currently not particular­ly good at looking after people at risk of miscarriag­e.”

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