Maternity units don't have to declare hundreds of stillbirths and newborn baby deaths every year
The HSE has been repeatedly asked to explain why only the deaths of babies over a certain weight are declared on MPSSs and not lighter babies, but the agency has declined to explain why. File picture: Denis Scannell
Hundreds of stillbirths and newborn baby deaths are being left out of maternity safety declarations every year by maternity units, the has learned.
This is because only the deaths of babies weighing over 2.5kg (5.5lbs) are declared on HSE monthly Maternity Patient Safety Statements (MPSS), while any baby lighter than that isn't declared at all.
This means the deaths of newborn babies, including stillbirths, who weigh around the same weight as other babies whose deaths were the subject of major HSE investigations in the past do not have to be declared. This is regardless of how viable they may have been before they died.
The 2010 stillbirth of baby Asha Reilly, one of 18 babies whose care was the subject of the damning 2018 Walker Report, would not â for example â have to be declared today on an MPSS. Her mother Lorraine said she weighed just 1.4kg (3.11lbs) when she was stillborn at Galwayâs Portiuncula Hospital on March 8, 2008.
The Walker Review of adverse events at Portiuncula concluded that in 16 of the 18 cases it reviewed â which also included the death of Ashaâs sister Amber shortly after she was born there in 2010 â were âserious errors in managementâ.

The deaths of babies with congenital anomalies like Down syndrome or Spina Bifida are also not declared on an MPSS, which was brought in as a âpowerful toolâ in 2015 to aid health service transparency by the then chief medical officer Dr Tony Holohan.
Lorraine told the : âI am disgusted that not all stillbirths have to be declared on Maternity Patient Safety Statements. To think any hospital would not have to declare the death of a baby stillborn at the same weight as my baby Asha is horrific.
"If the HSE does not include all perinatal deaths, then we are not getting a true account. Parents are then not being correctly informed of potential patient safety issues that multiple baby deaths might signal in any of the HSE's 19 maternity units."
She said the weight and congenital anomalies restrictions are "effectively airbrushing an untold number of babies out of these Maternity Patient Safety Statements".
Roisin Molloy, whose son Markâs death in 2012 sparked the Portlaoise Baby Scandal that led to major maternity reforms including the first National Maternity Strategy, said: âThis is appalling. Maternity Patient Safety Statements were brought in to regain the publicâs trust in our maternity services providing greater transparency. Under-reporting baby deaths totally undermines that trust.â

The fact that only stillbirths of a certain weight are declared on these safety statements emerged after the discovered a high number of stillbirths at Mayo University Hospital in 2023. The paper subsequently reported there had been seven stillbirths at MUH, five of which had happened between October and December that year.
But when the checked the hospitalâs MPSS for 2023, it was discovered that the perinatal mortality rate for the year only equated to two stillbirths. The HSE, which estimates there are about 250 stillbirths every year, later stated two of the seven stillbirths had been reviewed externally and had been classed at Serious Reportable Events (SREs).
As well as stating that Perinatal Mortality Rates (PMRs) on each MPSS relate to babies who weighed â2.5kgâ (5.5lbs) and over, the HSE also says the rates declared on each MPSS are "adjusted" PMRs. This is a rate that excludes the deaths of babies who had a congenital anomaly - which the HSE also refers to as "physiological or structural abnormalities" - when they died.
They are excluded because, according to the HSE, "larger fetal medicine referral units will have higher numbers of incidences of major congenital anomaly due to the diagnostic pathway". They also said the exclusion reflects the fact that "neonatal death is not unexpected and is in fact explained by the underlying condition".
According to the 2023 Irish Maternity Indicator System National Report, the total "unadjusted" perinatal mortality rate - defined as the "total infant deaths, including stillbirths and early neonatal deaths weighing 500 grams or more" â equated to 263 deaths. However, the "adjusted" figure â which excluded babies with congenital anomalies - for the same year equated to 45 baby deaths.
The HSE has been repeatedly asked to explain why only the deaths of babies over a certain weight are declared on MPSSs and not lighter babies, but the agency has declined to explain why. Instead, it stated that very detailed data on stillbirths is collated and reviewed by a variety of bodies in the HSE.
It was however put to the HSE that while these bodies do indeed publish the data, none of it is the number of stillbirths in each of the HSEâs 19 maternity units on a monthly basis. The HSE declined to comment.
In his February 2014 report into the deaths of four babies who died in Portlaoise Hospital between 2006 and 2012 and which featured in a January 2014 RTĂ programme, Dr Tony Holohan said each hospital should produce a monthly maternity patient safety statement.
The then chief medical officer said such statements would be a âpowerful toolâ to âinform on activity trends in a healthcare unitâ and to focus attention on areas âthat are both performing well and underperformingâ so that such data could be used to âimplement necessary change for better patient outcomesâ.
He said key metrics should include perinatal outcomes that include the number of stillbirths.



