Early care scheme could prevent thousands of miscarriages a year
Early care scheme could prevent thousands of miscarriages a year After going through two devastating miscarriages, Lisa Varey could not believe what she was thinking. She knew she would have to miscarry again before she could get the help she needed. Only when you have had three miscarriages do you normally qualify for specialist NHS help in England.
One in five pregnancies end in miscarriage, most before 14 weeks.
Lisa, 34, told her husband: "We're not waiting another year. We need to be pregnant and miscarry as soon as we possibly can. " She says they looked at each other, and said: "I can't believe I'm actually saying this out loud. "
Lisa is now pregnant and in the last weeks of her second trimester.
She breaks down in tears as she speaks about how much difference the project's help has made. "There's so much support for pregnant women, but it didn't always feel like there was any support for women who were no longer pregnant. We're having to go through that journey of just feeling very sad. " 'You feel like your body has failed you' Emily, 42, from Birmingham, suffered two miscarriages in one year and it left her feeling like her body had "failed" her.
Then a scan showed the baby was not growing as it should, which she says was devastating.
She went on to have a second miscarriage, before she was invited to join the Birmingham project.
She was put on aspirin and a higher dose of folic acid.
She says being offered early tests gave her possible reasons for the miscarriage, which took away "the guilt and shame that you feel".
"Knowing there were things that could make a difference.
That gives you some hope to hang on to," Emily says. Tommy's, the pregnancy charity, says NHS care offered to women who have suffered three miscarriages can be "inconsistent and inadequate".
Before then, women are often told to simply go home and to try again.
The new model started after just one miscarriage, and gave the women progressively more care after each baby loss. Researchers say it found a small reduction in the miscarriage rate among its test group. Where women did go on to have more miscarriages, researchers say they received better care and support.
They were also offered early scans to reassure them the pregnancy was advancing normally.
Following a third miscarriage, the pathway joins up with what the NHS currently offers - including a referral to a recurrent miscarriage clinic, further blood tests and a pelvic ultrasound.
"We don't do that with any other medical condition.
If somebody has a heart attack, we don't say have your third heart attack and then we will see if there is anything we can do," he says. He says the findings of the study, if rolled out across the NHS, could also save the NHS money.
Sally, who is 33, has had two miscarriages and feels let down by the care she was given.
She says she's not ready to try for another baby because of her experience.
If you have been affected by any of these issues, go to BBC Action Line for information and support
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