WQ92477 (e) Wedi’i gyflwyno ar 16/04/2024

A wnaiff y Gweinidog gadarnhau a oes unrhyw gynlluniau'n cael eu hystyried i awdurdodi tystysgrifau colli baban yng Nghymru?

Wedi'i ateb gan Ysgrifennydd y Cabinet dros Iechyd a Gofal Cymdeithasol | Wedi'i ateb ar 23/04/2024

Baby loss at any stage of pregnancy is distressing and I recognise the impact it can have on the entire family. The Welsh Government is committed to ensuring every family is appropriately and compassionately supported and understands the importance for parents to have their pregnancy loss formally recognised.

On 22 February, the UK Government launched a voluntary scheme to allow parents whose baby died before 24 weeks of pregnancy to apply for a free certificate to provide recognition of their loss. This is currently available to any parent who has experienced a loss before 24 weeks in England since 1 September 2018. The UK Government plans to extend the eligibility criteria and remove the existing time limit when it is able to do so. My officials are working closely with their UK counterparts to explore how the scheme could be extended to Wales.

Currently, all families who experience pregnancy loss at maternity units in Wales are supported by bereavement midwives and, in conjunction with the Sands charity, are offered memory boxes, which include a commemorative “birth certificate”. We are also collaborating with parent organisations, including Sands and experts in this area, to implement the National Bereavement Care Pathways across Wales specifically for miscarriage, stillbirth and pregnancy loss.