A University of Queensland researcher is concerned parents who hold their stillborn children, or bathe them, experience higher rates of depression and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
Dr Kelly Cunningham reviewed studies that had already been conducted, some of which appeared to show parents who held their stillborn children experienced higher levels of anxiety (particularly in subsequent pregnancies) and were reportedly more likely to break up.
While she questioned current guidelines from the Perinatal Society of Australia and New Zealand, Dr Cunningham ultimately agreed parents should not be forced to make a decision about how to cope with their stillborn child:
”There does not appear to be clear evidence of a benefit for parents in holding a stillborn child, so it would seem that the most appropriate approach, given the available evidence, would be to support the parents to make their own choice,” she said.
Emma McLeod, the founder of the Stillbirth Foundation Australia, told Mamamia questioning guidelines that allowed parents choice was ‘antiquated’.