Abstract Background Following a perinatal death, a formal standardised multi-disciplinary review should take place, to learn from the death of a baby and facilitate improvements in future care. It has been recommended that bereaved parents should be offered the opportunity to give feedback on the care they have received and integrate this feedback into the perinatal mortality review process. However, the MBRRACE-UK Perinatal Confidential Enquiry (2015) found that only one in 20 cases parental concerns were included in the review. Although guidance suggests parental opinion should be sought, little evidence exists on how this may be incorporated into the perinatal mortality review process. The purpose of the PARENTS study was to investigate ...
Abstract Background Losing a child tragically impacts the well-being and functioning of parents. Wit...
OBJECTIVE: To explore the healthcare experiences of parents whose baby died either before, during or...
To determine parents' views on how the death of their child should have been handled, a retrospectiv...
Following a perinatal death, a formal standardised multi-disciplinary review should take place, to l...
BackgroundFollowing a perinatal death, a formal standardised multi-disciplinary review should take p...
Objective When a formal review of care takes places after the death of a baby, parents are largely u...
BACKGROUND: The perinatal mortality review meeting that takes place within the hospital following a ...
Objectives The PARENTS 1 study (Parents' Active Role and ENgagement in The review of their Stillbirt...
OBJECTIVE: Engaging bereaved parents in the review process that examines their care before and after...
<p>Understanding parents’ experience of care is essential to develop high-quality perinatal bereavem...
Parent engagement in perinatal mortality review meetings following stillbirth may benefit parents an...
OBJECTIVE: Parent engagement in perinatal mortality review meetings following stillbirth may benefit...
IntroductionWe conducted a systematic review of reviews to synthesise evidence relating to improving...
Background: Stillbirth remains one of the least understood areas of infant death and accurate data o...
Background: An estimated 5.3 million perinatal deaths occur worldwide each year. In Ireland, there...
Abstract Background Losing a child tragically impacts the well-being and functioning of parents. Wit...
OBJECTIVE: To explore the healthcare experiences of parents whose baby died either before, during or...
To determine parents' views on how the death of their child should have been handled, a retrospectiv...
Following a perinatal death, a formal standardised multi-disciplinary review should take place, to l...
BackgroundFollowing a perinatal death, a formal standardised multi-disciplinary review should take p...
Objective When a formal review of care takes places after the death of a baby, parents are largely u...
BACKGROUND: The perinatal mortality review meeting that takes place within the hospital following a ...
Objectives The PARENTS 1 study (Parents' Active Role and ENgagement in The review of their Stillbirt...
OBJECTIVE: Engaging bereaved parents in the review process that examines their care before and after...
<p>Understanding parents’ experience of care is essential to develop high-quality perinatal bereavem...
Parent engagement in perinatal mortality review meetings following stillbirth may benefit parents an...
OBJECTIVE: Parent engagement in perinatal mortality review meetings following stillbirth may benefit...
IntroductionWe conducted a systematic review of reviews to synthesise evidence relating to improving...
Background: Stillbirth remains one of the least understood areas of infant death and accurate data o...
Background: An estimated 5.3 million perinatal deaths occur worldwide each year. In Ireland, there...
Abstract Background Losing a child tragically impacts the well-being and functioning of parents. Wit...
OBJECTIVE: To explore the healthcare experiences of parents whose baby died either before, during or...
To determine parents' views on how the death of their child should have been handled, a retrospectiv...