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Miscarriage: It can be really hard when you don't know what to expect

Miscarriage: It can be really hard when you don't know what to expect

Irish Examiner7 hours ago

The vast majority of women who suffer a miscarriage in Ireland feel unsupported by doctors, and have criticised a lack of counselling around such trauma.
Only a third of women feel their GPs provide enough support in the aftermath of miscarriage, with family and friends picking up the slack in two thirds of cases.
Similarly, just a third believe support from healthcare professionals to be good.
The Irish Examiner National Women's Health Survey, conducted by Ipsos B&A, found that one in four women experience miscarriage.
Among women who have experienced fertility issues, the figure rises to almost 50%.
In the survey of 1,000 women in Ireland, aftercare support receives the loudest criticism.
Six in 10 women said the availability of supports such as counselling is lacking.
A similar number reports that follow-up from healthcare providers is insufficient.
Jennifer Duggan, chairperson of the Miscarriage Association of Ireland, said the findings align with the organisation's experience: 'They, unfortunately, tally with what we hear ourselves from women we speak to."
Almost half criticised the quality of information provided by healthcare professionals, citing it as poor or very poor.
'It can be really hard when you don't know what to expect.
"You might be told that you may bleed heavily, but you don't know how heavy is too heavy, or how painful is too painful," said Ms Duggan.
It can be really scary and frightening to go through that with little to no information.
Naomi Collins, 45, from Galway, had her first miscarriage when she was 10 weeks pregnant.
At the hospital, she was told that the spotting would progress to miscarriage and that she should go home and wait for it to happen.
'That was the extent of the help I got in the hospital, and nobody checked up on me after that. That was disappointing,' she said.
'The overwhelming feeling was that I felt hollow."
Naomi Collins from Corrandulla, Co Galway, miscarried at 10 weeks. Picture: Ray Ryan
Given that one in four women miscarry, she said: "There are an awful lot of people who are not aware whatsoever that the woman sitting next to them at work has had a miscarriage, the woman next to you on the bus has had a miscarriage."
Some green shoots are emerging in follow-up care.
The Irish Family Planning Association (IFPA) announced earlier this month that it is expanding its counselling service to include women and couples who experience recurrent pregnancy loss.
The HSE-funded pilot project is available to anyone who has two or more miscarriages in a row, offering up to eight free counselling sessions.
"The grief that accompanies miscarriage is real and deeply felt," says the IFPA's counselling director, Clare O'Brien.
We don't want anyone to feel isolated and alone. We want them to know they can speak to us about their loss, fear and frustrations without judgment — and with total confidentiality and support.
In April, University College Cork's Pregnancy Loss Research Group (PLRG) made a series of resources available to women who experience miscarriage.
The resources include accessible booklets that answer questions such as what happens next and what supports are available, and provide details of other women's lived experiences.
In response to the survey's findings on miscarriage, Professor Keelin O'Donoghue, PLRG lead and obstetrician at Cork University Maternity Hospital, said: "Pregnancy loss is a common life experience for many women.
"Everybody will experience it differently and will have different needs in their care and support after it happens.
"The awareness of what is needed and why this is important is improving, but slowly, and there is much more work to be done across society, policy, health services, and communities with regard to pregnancy loss care and supports more generally."
Resources are available on the Pregnancy Loss website — pregnancyandinfantloss.ie

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I started trying for a family at the age of 24, when none of them were at that stage of life.' She found the peer-to-peer support offered by the Miscarriage Association of Ireland helpful. 'Because members had been through it themselves, they understood the jealousy I'd feel at others being pregnant or the sadness I'd feel coming up to the due date of a baby I'd lost. They got what I was going through,' says Duggan, who is now chairperson of the association. Alice Sheridan: 'The grief that follows miscarriage isn't always recognised by society. Lots of people don't know what to say to people who have lost pregnancies, so, often, they don't say anything at all.' Photograph: Moya Nolan Grieving alone Sheridan benefited from counselling after her miscarriages: 'It helped me process my loss and figure out what the future would look like for me and my family.' Sheridan found the experience so beneficial that she decided to retrain as a counsellor: 'I wrote my thesis about the disenfranchised grief many feel after miscarriage. People don't always recognise the profound loss involved and how women and couples need that loss to be acknowledged.' Acknowledging that loss is what the IFPA's new counselling service plans to do. 'It's difficult to say what the demand will be, but we do know that one in four women experiences miscarriage and our team of eight counsellors will be there to support them,' says O'Brien. 'All of us are accredited by the Irish Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy or the Irish Association for Humanistic and Integrative Psychotherapy and have decades of experience. Women and couples will be able to choose between in-person counselling at six centres throughout Ireland or sessions over the phone or Zoom.' These sessions will aim to validate people's bereavement. 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Click here to read our National Women's Health Survey. The Irish Examiner Women's Health Survey 2025 Ipsos B&A designed and implemented a research project for the Irish Examiner involving a nationally representative sample of n=1,078 women over the age of 16 years. The study was undertaken online with fieldwork conducted between April 30 and May 15, 2025. The sample was quota controlled by age, socio-economic class, region and area of residence to reflect the known profile of women in Ireland based on the census of population and industry agreed guidelines. Ipsos B&A has strict quality control measures in place to ensure robust and reliable findings; results based on the full sample carry a margin of error of +/-2.8%. In other words, if the research was repeated identically results would be expected to lie within this range on 19 occasions out of 20. A variety of aspects were assessed in relation to women's health including fertility, birth, menopause, mental health, health behaviour, and alcohol consumption.

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