Paper
‘Disparities in stillbirths in England: analysis a population-based study of 1.3 million births’ by B Thilaganathan, E Lenguerrand et al. in BJOG [open access].
Press release issued: 16 May 2025
Stillbirth rates are known to be higher for Black and Asian women than for white women, and those living in the most deprived areas are more at risk than those in the least deprived areas. Now a new University of Bristol-led study published in the Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology (BJOG) today [16 May] reveals that these disparities exist even within individual hospitals and NHS Trusts.
Paper
‘Disparities in stillbirths in England: analysis a population-based study of 1.3 million births’ by B Thilaganathan, E Lenguerrand et al. in BJOG [open access].
MBRRACE-UK perinatal mortality surveillance report
Findings from this study are relevant to the MBRRACE-UK perinatal mortality surveillance report for births in 2023 published on 8 May 2025. The report is an annual investigation into maternal deaths in the UK, focusing on women who die during pregnancy, childbirth, or within a year after giving birth.
About this study
This is the first study to report ethnic and socioeconomic imbalances (called “health disparity”) in stillbirth rates at the level of individual Hospitals or Health Trusts. The term disparity in this context is used to describe something that is unfair or unequal.
An ethnicity or ethnic group is a grouping of people who identify with each other on the basis of shared attributes that distinguish them from other groups. Those attributes can include common sets of traditions, ancestry, language, history, society, nation, religion, or social treatment within their residing area. Socioeconomic status is the position of an individual or group which is determined by a combination of social and economic factors such as income, amount and kind of education, type and prestige of occupation, and place of residence.
The study looked at ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in stillbirths across the 133 NHS Trusts in England using the National Maternity and Perinatal Audit data - a large-scale project established to provide data and information to those working in and using maternity services. This is done to evaluate and improve NHS maternity services, as well as to support women, birthing people, and their families to use the data within their decision-making.
Call to Action
The disparities in the stillbirth rate within the same maternity units noted in this study suggest that inequalities in access and/or delivery of quality antenatal care may be an important target for intervention and improvement by decision makers.
The findings of the study also suggest that targeting interventions on ethnicity alone is unlikely to be effective in reducing overall stillbirth rate nationally and would add to the inaccurate belief that ethnic categories alone determine people’s health outcomes.
The statistical modelling used within the study suggested that a strategy of stillbirth prevention targeted at women living in the poorest areas would potentially avoid more stillbirths than one focused on solely on Black and ethnic minority women and would be less stigmatising. These findings should guide care and policy decision makers in addressing this challenge.
An intervention using an initial early pregnancy risk assessment that includes ethnicity and socioeconomic deprivation may represent the most effective approach towards stillbirth reduction, especially if targeted at the NHS Trusts with the highest variability in quality and delivery of care.
Tommy’s support
If you need help or support after a pregnancy loss, or with any aspect of pregnancy, you can contact Tommy's midwives on 0800 147800 or email midwife@tommys.org
Sands Helpline
t: 0808 164 3332
e: helpline@sands.org.uk
The Helpline is for anyone who has been affected by the death of a baby and wants to talk to someone about their experience. The Helpline team are there to listen and give support, and can advise you about finding local help, whether from a Sands group or other counselling services, or information about other relevant support organisations.