Consultant must be involved immediately in the care of a seriously ill baby
GUIDANCE
Preparation
- Most neonatal deaths are anticipated and often occur following withdrawal of intensive care. The neonatal staff in conjunction with the parents should plan the care of the baby around death
- If baby’s condition deteriorates seriously, discuss immediately with on-call consultant
- On-call consultant will assess the situation with nursing and medical team, ensuring thorough documentation
Discussion with parents
- If death is inevitable, consultant will discuss with parents
- ensure baby’s nurse is present and document discussion
- Use Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Making decisions to limit treatment in life-limiting and life-threatening conditions in children: a framework for practice as appropriate - see https://adc.bmj.com/content/100/Suppl_2/
- If appropriate and local policy, review baby for organ donation
- discuss with organ donation team before approaching parents
- further guidance available via https://www.odt.nhs.uk/deceased-donation/best-practice-guidance/paediatric-care/
- If organ donation not appropriate or considered, then proceed to ask parents if they wish a religious or spiritual person to be involved
- Complete the West Midlands Neonatal Operational Delivery Network Integrated Comfort Care Pathway (ICCP) https://www.networks.nhs.uk/nhs-networks/staffordshire-shropshire-and-black-country-newborn/documents/Integrated_Comfort_Care_Pathwaysept11v6.25.01.12.pdf This document:
- acts as a record of events and a guide for palliative care
- contains useful links for further information
- If transfer home or to a hospice, complete Advanced Care Plan, as dictated by local team/hospice
Second opinion
- If there is disagreement amongst the MDT or between the team and the parents, consultant to seek second opinion from a colleague
Further support
- If parents do not accept second clinical assessment:
- discuss with medical director or deputy
- discuss with parents the option of a further opinion from consultant neonatologist from another unit in neonatal network
- Consultant may wish to seek advice from Trust’s legal advisers via medico-legal department or on-call manager
- Timescale for events in individual babies may vary from <24 hr to >1–2 weeks
Good documentation is essential
Saying goodbye
- Consider an appropriate place of care for baby, including transfer to a hospice if available/appropriate and parents’ preference
- if local transport facility unavailable, contact regional transport team to facilitate this
- Parents may request a blessing or naming ceremony by a religious representative
- Ensure all family members are allowed time and privacy with baby
- Offer parents an opportunity to take photographs of baby if they wish
- Provide a keep-sake box that can include photos, hand and foot prints, lock of hair, cot card, etc.
- Offer parents opportunity to wash, dress and prepare baby
- A small toy or other memento may accompany baby to mortuary
DEATH
- When a baby dies there are formalities to be completed. These should be handled as sensitively as possible to minimise emotional trauma to parents, whose wishes should be respected and who should be guided carefully through the necessary procedures
- Following notification of baby’s death from attending nurse, a doctor or ANNP should confirm the death and make a suitable entry in the case notes with date and time of confirmation of death
- If the death was sudden and unexpected (e.g. resuscitation failure in delivery suite or in the A&E soon after arrival):
- if no radiological confirmation of position of ETT, another practitioner must verify position on direct laryngoscopy before removal, and the depth of insertion (from lips or nostril) should be recorded. A post-mortem X-ray is not necessary for such confirmation
- similarly, leave all central vascular catheters and drains in situ after cutting short and covered with dressing
Ensure baby’s correct registered name appears on all documentation
Formal arrangements
- Neonatal staff will offer advice about registration and funeral arrangements with back-up support from hospital general office/bereavement office
- Involve bereavement midwife early if available
- In some areas, all deaths must be discussed with Coroner’s officer. Check the requirements of your local Coroner before issuing death certificate and requesting post-mortem consent
- if you are unable to issue death certificate, a senior clinician must report the death to the Coroner for a Coroner’s post-mortem
- If death certificate can be issued:
- parents make an appointment with Registrar of births and deaths to deliver death certificate, unless Coroner’s officer recommends otherwise
- Registrar of births and deaths will issue certificate of authority for burial or cremation, which should be given to:
- hospital general office if hospital is burying baby
- funeral director handling burial if parents are making their own arrangements
Post-mortem
- Offer a post-mortem in all babies not requiring investigation by the Coroner. It is the parents’ right to have this choice
- give parents an information leaflet to assist their choice
- if case required Coroner investigation, Coroner determines need for post-mortem and parents cannot choose
- Post-mortem request must come from a middle grade doctor/consultant and a witness must sign the fully completed consent form
- send original form to mortuary with baby, place copies in baby’s hospital notes together with copy of death certificate
- death summary must be completed by middle grade doctor/consultant within ≤24 hr of death
- copy of death summary must be sent to mortuary to accompany baby having a post-mortem
Baby transfer
- Special arrangements will be made to transport baby to mortuary according to local hospital policy; allow parents to accompany baby if they wish
- some may prefer to see baby on the NNU if possible or chapel of rest
- Parents may take baby’s body directly from the NNU, once appropriate documentation has been completed (see SANDS website - www.sands.org.uk/). Where babies are taken will depend upon religious belief of parents or designated funeral director. In all cases strict adherence of local hospital policy must apply
Parent support
- Offer bereavement support information (e.g. SANDS, Child Bereavement UK, ACT) or counsellor
- Consultant will offer bereavement counselling at 6–8 weeks, or following final post-mortem result
- Arrange appointment with trained bereavement nurse/midwife specialist if available
Communication
- Inform named obstetrician and neonatology consultants at referring hospital (if appropriate), GP, health visitor, and community midwife that death has occurred. (See Death guideline checklist)
- Document this in notes or on local checklists
- Ensure any pending appointments or referrals are cancelled
- Follow local guidelines for notifying child death and completion of form A and B for death reviews (legal requirement)
Date updated: 2024-01-08