Baby loss certificate recognising unborn babies before 24 weeks “a step in the right direction”, says SPUC

A parent who has lost a baby since September 2018 may also apply retroactively for a certificate on the gov.uk website. The scheme, which is voluntary, follows complaints from grieving parents unable to gain official recognition for the loss of an unborn baby.

A memorial book allowing parents to record miscarriages before 24 weeks was recently introduced in Scotland.

Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Victoria Atkins MP said: “Losing a baby can be a hugely traumatic event and the introduction of certificates to formally acknowledge the loss of a life is a positive step towards better supporting women and parents affected.”

The scheme, introduced as part of the Government’s Women’s Health Strategy, has been hailed by Samantha Collinge, co-chair of the pregnancy loss review commissioned in 2018, as “a milestone moment for people who have suffered baby loss…

“Miscarriage, and other types of pre-24 weeks baby loss, is often minimised and treated as a ‘clinical event’ or ‘just one of those things’ rather than the loss of a baby, and sadly the emotional impact of the loss is often disregarded.”

SPUC comment

A SPUC spokesperson said: “We hope that this scheme will bring about a shift in attitude towards unborn babies, especially lives whose humanity and right to life have been cruelly denied by abortion.

“While abortion robs the unborn of personhood, the grief a parent feels following a miscarriage, even before 24 weeks, is proof enough that all unborn lives matter, exactly because they are people.”



@spucprolife
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Please enter your email if you would like to stay in touch with us and receive our latest news directly in your inbox.