Featured image courtesy of Alex McClintock.
Earlier this month Hagar Cohen and Alex McClintock spent time with a Sydney family and their stillborn daughter, Chloe for an ABC Background Briefing investigation into preventable stillbirth. This is how it happened.
For weeks we’d been chasing hospitals, trying to get access to maternity wards to tell the story of a stillbirth. After endless phone calls with suspicious hospital administrators, it was the Mater Maternity Hospital in North Sydney that invited us in.
Then it was simply a matter of waiting for a stillbirth to happen. Sounds horrible, doesn’t it? Waiting for a stillbirth to happen. That’s our job, though, and we knew this was an important story to tell.
We didn’t need to wait long. Six babies are stillborn in Australia every day — one every four hours.
Deb de Wilde,a social worker, got in touch and said she had spoken to a couple who wanted to tell their daughter’s story. Her name was Chloe. She was born at 37 weeks and four days. She was perfect.
You can listen to Chloe’s story on Radio National’s Background Briefing podcast, here.
We jumped in a cab, and started making plans. I’ll do this, you’ll do that. We wanted to make sure we were as sensitive as possible; we didn’t want to push the boundaries of what a grieving family were comfortable with.
The penny dropped on the Harbour Bridge: we were about to see a dead baby. We spent the rest of the drive in silence.