Published Jul 04 2018

The dos and don'ts of supporting women after a miscarriage

So your friend decides to forget the '12-week rule' and tells her family and social networks she's pregnant. She knows the stats – one in four pregnancies ends in miscarriage – but she wants to have the support of family and friends around her in case she needs it.

Then the worst happens: she miscarries. And she discovers many people around her, including health professionals, lack sensitivity when talking about the miscarriage. Some don’t even acknowledge her loss.

Miscarriage in Australia is defined as the loss of a foetus before 20 weeks. From a medical perspective, miscarriage is easily managed as a 'routine pregnancy complication'. Emotionally, however, it can take a massive toll. As one interviewee in our yet-to-be-published research explained: 

Just because it’s common, doesn’t mean that it’s not extremely traumatic. (Ella)

Women who experience miscarriage frequently feel grief and loss of a similar intensity to other major losses. It’s common to have clinical levels of anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the weeks, months or years following a miscarriage.

Family, friends and health professionals play an important role in supporting women affected by miscarriage: what they do or don’t say can have a lasting impact. Yet our cultural discomfort with discussing any sort of loss – especially one that's 'unseen' – means women are often met with a wall of silence.

It’s a bit like postnatal depression….people just don’t talk about it. (Linda)

Grief can affect women’s mental health in the short and long term. Photo: Nicolas Lobos

So how can we support women better? What do women need from family, friends and health professionals at the time of a miscarriage?

While there's limited evidence-based research, our yet-to-be-published pilot study of 14 women who had experienced miscarriage found their needs align with advice currently provided by Australia’s pregnancy loss support organisations. Here are the key dos and don'ts:

Dos

Acknowledge their loss
While you may worry you'll say the wrong thing and upset them further, saying nothing at all is worse. It can make women feel you don’t care or think their loss was insignificant. All you need to say is: “I’m sorry about your miscarriage.”

… I think it’s better acknowledging it than not, because I guess if you’re not acknowledging it, then it feels like you don’t care. (Ellen)

Listen and let them grieve
Many women need to talk about their experience. Ask them how they are. Some women find it really helpful to talk about how they're feeling; others may not be ready, but will appreciate you asking.

Talk to them, listen. Don’t just try to sweep it under the carpet … Give the person the opportunity to grieve, because you have lost a child ... (Jane)

Encourage them to talk to other women who’ve had a miscarriage
It’s often only when women start to talk about their miscarriage that they find out others around them have experienced miscarriage too. Knowing they’re not alone and that others understand how they’re feeling can be really helpful.


Read more: Five ways to help parents cope with the trauma of stillbirth


Offer practical support
Drop off a meal or help with childcare. Gifts and flowers show you care and are acknowledging their loss.

End the silence around miscarriage
Women want miscarriage talked about more openly so they don’t feel so alone.

Don’ts

Avoid clichéd comments
While well-intended, comments such as “it wasn’t meant to be” or “it’s so common” can be hurtful and dismissive of their loss.

People saying, ‘Oh, you know, you’ll get pregnant again’ or ‘Oh, it wasn’t meant to be’. You know, that’s just the worst thing to say. And so many people say stuff like that … (Samantha)

Avoid blaming and offering unsolicited advice
Be sensitive and empathetic; don’t offer advice that could make a woman feel she's to blame.

Lots of unhelpful, unsolicited advice … it was all about ‘you’re working too hard’, ‘you’re stressing too much’, ‘you’re over-thinking it’. (Amy)

Recognise grief doesn’t have a time limit
Women’s levels of grief aren't contingent on how many weeks pregnant they were – their baby has died. It’s OK for them to work through their grief in their own time.


Read more: Women pregnant after a loss need better support


Where to go for help

Outside social networks, there are a number of vital pregnancy loss support organisations across Australia that provide information, support and bereavement care to women affected by miscarriage. These include:

For further psychological support, Medicare covers up to three pregnancy counselling sessions through referral from a GP.

Improving support for women affected by miscarriage starts by speaking openly about it and letting women know they're not alone in the experience.

This article was co-authored by Anita Guyett from Sands Australia, a miscarriage, stillbirth and neonatal death charity, and Meredith Temple-Smith.

This article originally appeared on The Conversation.

About the Authors

  • Jade bilardi

    Jade is an experienced social researcher specialising in behavioural health and wellbeing research in the area of sexual and reproductive health. Her current areas of research interest include the psychosocial impact of miscarriage and improved support and the improved management of bacterial vaginosis.

  • Jayashri kulkarni

    Professor, Monash Alfred Psychiatry Research Centre

    Jayashri Kulkarni founded and directs a large psychiatric research group, the Monash Alfred Psychiatry Research Centre (MAPrc). A major area of her research involves psychoneuroendocrine studies of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis in women with severe mental illnesses. In particular, she has pioneered the use of estrogen as a new treatment in schizophrenia. Women’s Mental Health is a major area of Jayashri’s research and over the last 25 years she has worked to improve the quality of care for women with mental illnesses.

Other stories you might like