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Time:
08:00-08:15
Opening Welcome
08:00-08:05
SCDT Welcome
08:05-08:15
ISPID&ISA Chairs Welcome
08:15-08:20
2016 Conference - What we learned
Virginia Kanopa Almada, Uruguay and Alejandro Jenik, Argentina
08:20-10:00
Plenary Session 1 - Inclusiveness and Reducing Disparities
Chair: Alan D. Cameron, UK
Co-Chair: Claire Storey, UK
Introduction: Nicola Sturgeon
08:20-08:40
What causes wellness and the implications for families
Harry Burns, University of Strathclyde, UK
08:40-09:00
Resentment and Loss
Glen Pettigrove, Glasgow University, UK
09:00-09:20
Care after stillbirth: evidence-based support for parents throughout their journey.
Dimitrios Siassakos, Academic Centre for Women's Health, University of Bristol, UK
09:20-09:40
A Voice of a Vilomah
Nicole Bowles, Parent Speaker, UK
09:40-10:00
Questions
10:00-10:20
Break/Exhibitors/Posters
10:20-12:00
Parallel Session 1 A
Chair: Vicki Flenady, Australia
10:25-10:40
O-085 Improving, but could do better: Trends in gestation-specific stillbirth in Australia, 1994-2015
Vicki Flenady, Stillbirth Centre of Research Excellence, Mater Research Institute-University of Queensland, Australia
10:40-10:55
O-001 Consequences of perinatal death among midwives, obstetricians and assistant nurses: Results from a qualitative study in Norway
Beate André, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway
10:55-11:10
O-002 National Review of Perinatal Bereavement Services in Irish Maternity Hospitals
Riona Cotter, National Implementation Group for the Bereavement Standards, Ireland; Cork University Maternity Hospital, Ireland
12:00-12:50
Lunch / Exhibitors/ Posters
12:50-15:20
Plenary Session 2- Policy and Public Health
Chair: Peter S. Blair, UK
Co Chair: Katherine Gold, USA
12:50-13:20
Findings from the New Zealand SUDI case-control study
Edwin Mitchell, University of Auckland, New Zealand - Keynote Speaker
13:20-13:50
The Power of partnership for global stillbirth prevention
Helga Fogstad, PMNCH, WHO, Switzerland - Keynote Speaker
13:50-14:10
Reducing stillbirth in Scotland-changing culture and practice, a success story
Catherine Calderwood, CMO Scottish Government, UK - Keynote Speaker
14:10-14:30
Each Baby Counts - a UK initiative to reduce intrapartum harm
Alan D. Cameron, Glasgow University, UK
14:30-14:50
2016 American Academy of Pediatrics safe sleep guidelines: What's new? What's Controversial?
Rachel Moon, University of Virginia School of Medicine, USA
14:50-15:20
15:20-15:40
Break /Exhibitors/Posters
15:40-17:00
Parallel Session 2A
Chair: Rachel Y Moon, USA
17:00-17:30
Poster Session for other delegates at Exhibition Area
19:00-20:00
Remembrance Evening Programme - Glasgow Cathedral
10:20-12:00
Parallel Session 1B
Chair: Alison McFadden, UK
10:20-10:40
O-005 What are parents’ and healthcare professionals’ experiences of care after stillbirth in low and middle-income countries
Clare Shakespeare, University of Bristol, UK
O-006 Australian men's experiences of support following pregnancy loss
Kate Louise Obst, University of Adelaide, Australia
O-007 The victimization in absence of a culprit.“The limbic victim“
Eva Imparato, Association SUID & SIDS Italy Omlus, Italy
11:10-11:25
O-008 Exploring social isolation and disconnectedness resulting from child death
Lynsay Clair Allan, Scottish Cot Death Trust, UK
11:25-11:40
O-009 Pregnancy and Infant Loss Network: Bereavement care and education in Ontario, Canada
Michelle La Fontaine, Pregnancy and Infant Loss Network, Sunnybrook Health Sciences, Canada
11:40-11:55
O-010 Sudden unexpected death in infancy and the disparity experienced by Māori
Melanie E MacFarlane, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Lunch/ Exhibitors/ Posters
Parallel Session 2B
Chair: Lynsay Clair Allan, UK
15:40-15:55
O-041 Role Modelling Safe Sleep Practices with Pre-schoolers through Doll Play – “Face Up, Face Clear Clear, Safe Place”
Sharon Ayto, Department of Woman's and Children's Health, Southern District Health Board, New Zealand
15:55-16:10
O-042 Are children in the care of foster parents dying suddenly and unexpectedly when exposed to unsafe sleep circumstances?
Ian Mitchell, Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, Canada
16:10-16:25
O-043 Sleep safety in day care centers: An awareness campaign in Belgium (Flemish Community) using virtual reality as an educational tool
Kim Huyghe on behalf of Greet Wissels, Departement of Child Care, Child and Family, Belgium
16:25-16:40
O-044 Infant care practices employed by Queensland caregivers: are safe sleeping messages being translated into practice?
Roni Cole, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; Sunshine Coast Hospital and Health Service, Australia
16:40-16:55
O-144 Nurses’ Knowledge and Delivery of Infants' Safe Sleep Practices and SIDS Risk-reduction Messages - A Binational Study
Anat Shatz, Shaaree Zedek Medical Centre, Israel
17:00-17:30
Ask the Experts Q&A Session
Chair: Alan D. Cameron
Experts:
David Tappin
ISPID: Fern Hauck and John Thomson
ISA: Vicky Flenady, Robert Silver, Jan Jap Erwich
19:00-20:00
Remembrance evening programme - Glasgow Cathedral
Parallel Session 1C
Chair: Marta C Cohen, UK
10:25-11:25
W-001 WORKSHOP
Taking Consent and Information Giving in Fetal and Neonatal Loss
Elspeth Helen Whitby, Marta C Cohen, Kate Reed and Julie Ellis, University of Sheffield, UK
O-011 Post Mortem Consent – The Impact of Deprivation and Ethnicity
Margaret J Evans, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, UK; University of Edinburgh, UK; University of Leicester, UK
O-012 Should Written Consent Be Required before Fetal Membrane Stripping Especially among GBS Carriers?
James A. McGregor, Group B Strep International, USA
15:40-17:00
Parallel Session 2C
15:40-15:55
O-045 Failures in the Emergency Obstetric and Neonatal Care Referral Chain and High Rates of Intrapartum Stillbirth in Southwestern Uganda
Elizabeth A Mccue, Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, USA
O-046 Why Are Babies Dying in the First Month after Birth? A Study of Neonatal Mortality in Jordan 2016
Rakan Ahmad Aburoman, Jordan
O-047 Variations in stillbirth and early neonatal mortality associated with different polluting fuel types in Bangladesh
Monjura Khatun Nisha, The University of Sydney, Australia
O-048 Survival of Very low birth weight neonates for age 0-7 days among deliveries in St. Paul's Hospital millennium medical college, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, one year cross sectional study
Tizita Abraham Basha, St Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College, Ethiopia
Poster Session for delegates
Remembrance evening programme - Glasgow Cathedral
Parallel Session 1D
Chair: Betty McEntire, USA
O-013 Developmental changes in 125I-Epibatidine binding to nicotinic receptors in the brainstem ascending arousal system in the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
Arunnjah Vivekanandarajah, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, USA, For the PASS Network; The University of Sydney, Australia
O-014 5-HT1A Binding Deficiencies in the Rostral Serotonergic Raphe System of the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
Michael R McConville, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, USA
O-015 Diagnostic classification effects on brain pathology data in a cohort of SUDI cases
Rita Machaalani, University of Sydney, Australia
O-016 Blue Baby Blues - A Case Report. Implications of Maternal Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor Use for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
Alexander Simpson, Royal Hospital for Children, UK
O-017 The Victorian Perinatal Autopsy Service (VPAS): Insights into Clinical Governance and program development
Kerryn Frances Ireland Jenkin, Royal Women's Hospital, Australia
Lunch / Exhibitors /Posters
Parallel Session 2D
Chair: Clea Harmer, UK
O-050 Risk Factors for Antepartum and Intrapartum Stillbirth: An exploration using Western Australian linked data, 2005–2015
Brad Mark Farrant, The University of Western Australia, Australia
O-051 Maternal sleep during pregnancy and poor fetal outcomes: A scoping review of the literature with meta-analysis
Jane Warland, University of South Australia, South Australia
O-052 Alerting Pregnant Women and Their Families as to the Lack of Efficacy and Danger of “Alternative Treatments" for Prevention of Group B Streptococcal (GBS) Invasive Disease in Babies
O-054 Reduction in dosage of misoprostol for induction of labour for stillbirth: a before and after study
Abi Merriel, University of Bristol, UK
O-152 Alive and kicking. “Feel life” - information campaign to help pregnant women to monitor their baby’s movements
Line Schrader, Norwegian SIDS and Stillbirth Society, Norway
Parallel Session 1E
Chair: Monique Pauline L'Hoir, The Netherlands
O-018 Epidemiological findings of SIDS from England: the Oto Acoustic Signals Investigation Study (OASIS) 2016-2017
Peter S Blair, University of Bristol, UK
O-019 2017 Survey of prevalence of protective and risk factors for SIDS in The Netherlands
Adèle C Engelberts, Zuyderland Medical Center, The Netherlands
O-020 An analysis of sleep scene reconstruction photographs of SUDI infants compared with controls
Jessica Wilson, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
O-021 Social vulnerability among the Queensland SUDI population and the factors prevalent in vulnerable groups
Rebecca Ann Shipstone, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia
O-022 Sleeping environment in Sudden Unexpected Infant Death cases: a population-based study in France
Karine Levieux, Nantes University Hospital, France
O-023 Reducing Sudden Infant Death Risk Factors in Sheffield - A Partnership Approach
Julia Thompson, Public Health, Sheffield City Council, UK
Parallel Session 2E
Chair: Jeri E Wilson, USA
15:40-16:40
W-002 WORKSHOP
Healing Arts: Writing Through Grief
Alexis Marie Chute, University of Alberta, Canada; Lesley University, USA
O-055 River's Gift - Breathing life into SIDS research
Alexandra Hamilton, Australia
Parallel Session 1F
Chair: Katherine Gold, USA
O-024 Stillbirths in Ghana: Determining Cause of Death
Abdul Razak Shuaib Abdul Mumin, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Ghana
O-025 Towards reducing newborn deaths in Cross River state, Nigeria: Impact of Essential Newborn Care Course (ENCC) on quality of care
Kazeem Adisa Arogundade, Pathfinder International, Nigeria
O-026 Counting and reviewing babies born dead in low resource settings: Stillbirth surveillance in Sri Lanka
Kapila Jayaratne, Family Health Bureau, Ministry of Health, Sri Lanka
O-027 Experiences, perceptions and practices of women and families around stillbirth: a qualitative exploration in urban and rural districts of Kabul province, Afghanistan
Aliki Christou, The University of Sydney, Australia
O-028 Defining disrespect and abuse of newborns and stillborn infants: a review of the evidence and an expanded typology of respectful maternity care
Emma Sacks, Johns Hopkins University, USA
O-029 Socio-demographic, maternal, and health care factors associated with stillbirth in Afghanistan: analysis of the 2010 Afghanistan Mortality Survey
Lunch/Exhibitors/Posters
Parallel Session 2F
Parent Activity
Chair: Christine Ikponmwonba, USA
Self Confidence and Resilience
Rose Goodenough and Marilyn Gordon, Inner Space, Glasgow, UK
Poster Session for delegates
Parallel Session 1G
Chair: Anat Shatz, Israel
O-030 Attitudes and Social Norms Associated with Maternal Decisions about Infant Sleep Location: Results from the SMART Study
Rachel Y Moon, University of Virginia School of Medicine, USA
O-031 Fifteen years of infant care and safe sleeping messages: have parental care practices changed?
O-032 Safe sleeping campaign - Are we really successful?
Ursula Kiechl Kohlendorfer, Medical University of Innsbruck, Austria
O-033 The Effect of Social Network Types and Social Norms on Infant Sleep Practices
Rebecca Carlin, George Washington University School of Medicine, USA
O-034 Evaluation of the Pēpi-Pod® Program through the lens of Australian Indigenous ethical principles
Jeanine Young, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia
O-035 Qualitative Evaluation of Embedding Safe Sleep in Prenatal Education
Carolyn R Ahlers Schmidt, University of Kansas School of Medicine, USA
Parallel Session 2G
Chair: Peter S Blair, UK
O-056 Psychiatric disorder and risk of sudden infant death syndrome: Results of a clinical survey
Jeffrey Sverd, North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center Roslyn Heights, USA; Department of Psychiatry Nassau County Medical Center Hempstead, USA
O-057 Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths (SUID) with Use of U-Shaped Pillows in the Sleep Area — United States, 2004-2015
Carrie K Shapiro-Mendoza, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA
O-059 Factors associated with age of death in sudden infant death syndrome
Kelty Allen, Microsoft, USA
O-060 Prevalence of and Factors Associated with Maintaining Smoking Cessation after Pregnancy
Eve Colson, Yale School of Medicine, USA
Time:
Plenary Session 3- Global Health
SUDI
Chair: Fern R Hauck, USA
Co-Chair: David Tappin, UK
08:30-08:50
Pathology and SUDI
Roger Byard, University of Adelaide, Australia
08:50-09:10
Cribs for Kids National Safe Sleep Hospital Certification Program
Michael Goodstein, Wellspan Health York Hospital, USA
09:10-09:30
Changing policy on smoking in pregnancy and post-partum: is research evidence enough?
Linda Bauld, Stirling University, UK
09:30-09:50
CDC's SUID Case Registry, Challanges in Classifying SUID, and the Diagnostic shift
Carrie Shapiro-Mendoza, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA
09:50-10:10
Questions
10:10-10:40
10:40-11:55
Plenary Session 5 - Prediction and Prevention
STILLBIRTH
Co-Chair: Marta C Cohen, UK
10:40-11:00
The contribution of local hospital review to preventing stillbirth
Jenny Kurinczuk, Director of the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit (NPEU), UK
11:00-11:20
Placental causes of stillbirth
Robert M. Silver, University of Utah, USA
11:20-11:40
How stillbirth personally impacts physicians, nurses, and the hospital staff and effective strategies for coping with death and bereavement in clinical care
Katherine Gold, University of Michigan, USA
11:55-12:00
P-001 Predictors of mothers’ contact with the baby following intrauterine death
Paul Richard Cassidy, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
12:05-13:30
Parallel Session 3A
Chair: David Tappin, UK
12:10-12:25
O-061 Media Sources of Infant Care Information Accessed by US Mothers, 2011-2014
Fern R Hauck, University of Virginia School of Medicine, USA
12:25-12:40
O-062 The use of a photo database in the prevention of Cot Death
Wieke Eefting, Wieke Eefting Fotografie, Netherlands
12:40-12:55
O-063 Oto Acoustic Signals Investigation Study (OASIS) - Preliminary findings
12:55-13:10
O-064 ‘Through the tubes’ adapted for the Netherlands
Monique Pauline Lhior, Wageningen University & Research (WUR), The Netherlands
13:10-13:25
O-065 SUDI: Infant sleeping position is still not reliably reported in death scene investigations
Jeanine Young, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; Queensland Paediatric Quality Council, Australia
13:30-14:30
Walk around, lunch, viewing posters with annoucement of poster prizes
14:30-16:00
Parallel Session 4A
Chair: Dimitrios Siassakos, UK
14:35-14:50
O-092 Should Somatostatin used as first-line agent in management of Congenital Chylothorax?
Therese Mary William, University Hospital Lewisham, UK
14:50-15:05
O-093 Bereaved parents as active partners in stillbirth research
Daniel Nuzum, University College Cork, Ireland
15:05-15:20
O-094 Development of a Core Outcome Set and identification of outcome measurement tools for interventions after stillbirth
Danya Bakhbakhi, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK; North Bristol NHS Trust, UK
15:20-15:35
O-095 Causes of Stillbirths at autopsy in North East London: a 5-year retrospective audit
Mohammad H Haini, The Royal London Hospital, UK
15:35-16:50
O-168 Maternal perception of fetal movements and risk of late stillbirth: findings from the New Zealand Multi Centre Stillbirth Study
Billie Bradford, University of Auckland, New Zealand
14:30-20:00
Free Afternoon, sightseeing for international delegates OR Option to stay for local delegates
08:30-10:10
Co-Chair: Hannah Blencowe, UK
Providing humane care for women following stillbirth
Tina Lavender, University of Manchester, UK
Where is stillbirth on the global stage? What's holding us back and what we can do about it
Susannah Hopkins Leisher, Mater Research, University of Queensland and Columbia University, USA
Making stillbirths visible and moving to action
Vicki Flenady, University of Queensland, Australia
10:40-12:05
Plenary Session 6 - QUALITY AND SAFETY
SUDI
Chair: John Thompson, New Zealand
Co-Chair: Adrienne Gordon, Australia
A Web-tool to assess sudden unexpected death in infancy risk and provide targeted advice at the six-week check in primary care
Christine McIntosh, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Is sleeping our preterm babies prone whilst in the neonatal unit good for their brains?
Rosemary S C Horne, Monash University, Australia
Unexpected infant deaths: What have we learned in the past 40 years, what difference has it made, and where do we go from here?
Peter John Fleming, Bristol University, UK
P-002 Positive changes in the family functioning after the death of child
Anna Liisa Aho, University of Tampere, Finland
12:05-12:25
Parallel Session 3B
12:10-12:25
O-066 Child protection serious case reviews after sudden unexpected death in infancy
Joanna Garstang, Birmingham Community Healthcare Trust, UK; Warwick Medical School, UK
O-067 Do the Recommendations of Public Fatality Inquiries Really Protect Vulnerable Children placed in the care of the state?
Mary Claire M Verbeke, Queen’s University, Canada
O-075 An audit of compliance with UK national statutory guidance for the investigation of Sudden Unexpected Death in Infancy
Gabrielle Cropp, Birmingham Community Healthcare Trust, UK
12:55-12:10
O-069 Recurrent sudden unexpected infant deaths in families: causes and concerns
Industry Sponsored Talk
Walk around, lunch, viewing posters with annoucement of poster prizes
Parallel Session 4B
Chai: Alan D Cameron, UK
W-004 WORKSHOP
Each Baby Counts: Listening Exercise
Each Baby Counts Project Team: Alan D. Cameron and Sarah Prince, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, UK
Parallel Session 3C
Chair: Jane Warland, Australia
O-070 Head to heart experiential learning in perinatal bereavement care for healthcare professionals
Daniel Nuzum, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland; Cork University Hospital, Ireland
O-071 Maternal Sleep Position: Is Left Really Best? An MRI Study of Maternal Haemodynamics During Late Pregnancy
Aimee Humphries, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
O-072 Comprehensive review of the evidence regarding the effectiveness of community–based primary health care in improving neonatal health
O-073 Inequalities and stillbirth: A meta-narrative systematic review
Carol Kingdon, University of Central Lancashire, UK
14:30-15:35
Parallel Session 4C
Chair: Mary Ray, UK
O-096 The use of CSF urea level in investigation of sudden infant and child death
Melanie Joy Newbould, Royal Manchester Children's Hospital, UK
O-097 Comparison of oxygen saturation values recorded from ex-preterm and term infants using newer generation pulse oximeters
Cliodhna Godden, Princess Royal Maternity Hospital, UK
O-098 Young Mothers: Their perceptions of risk for SIDS and associated infant-care practices
Catherine Ellis, University of Warwick, UK
O-099 Reducing Sudden Unexplained Death in Infants in NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde: An Information Pathway for Staff
Lesley Nish, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, UK
Parallel Session 3D
Chair: Peter John Fleming, UK
O-058 Factors Associated with Maternal Choice to Roomshare, Not Bedshare
Ann Lenox Kellams, University of Virginia, USA
O-076 Profile of Sudden Unexpected Deaths in Childhood (SUDC): the OASIS study 2016-2017
Peter John Fleming, University of Bristol, UK
O-077 Can a self-assessment method of impact and evaluation in bereavement support be useful in understanding and supporting families bereaved by SIDS?
Jennifer Ward, The Lullaby Trust, UK
O-078 The role of Sodium Channels in Sudden Unexpected Death in Pediatrics
Anne M. Rochtus, Boston Children’s Hospital, USA; Harvard Medical School, USA
O-079 Using peer education to support young parents to reduce the risk of SIDS
Charlene Crossandra Annon, The Lullaby Trust, UK
14:30-15:45
Parallel Session 3E
Chair: Susannah Hopkins Leisher, USA
14:30-15:15
W-003 WORKSHOP
Preventing stillbirth; best practice in identifying and managing women with risk factors as part of routine antenatal care
Vicki Flenady, Glenn Gardener, Alexander Heazell and Jane Norman
15:15-15:30
O-080 Development of a bundle of care to reduce stillbirths in Australia; a survey of Australian maternity hospitals
Vicki Flenady, The University of Queensland, Australia
Parallel Session 3F
12:10-13:10
TP-001 THEMED PANEL
What can the placenta tell us about stillbirth?
Irene Scheimberg, Margaret Evans, Gitta Turowski and Dimitrios Siassakos
O-081 Introduction of the water method for preservation of the deceased fetus
Ilona KF Tiemens-van Putten, GGZ Rivierduinen, The Netherlands
14:30-17:00
Shattered by Lisa Nicoll
Meeting Time: 14:30
Parallel Session 3G
Chair: Alan D Cameron, UK
O-082 Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure is Associated with Increased Late Stillbirth: Findings from the Collaborative Individual Participant data (IPD) Sleep and Stillbirth (Cribss) Meta-Analysis
Lesley E M McCowan , University of Auckland, New Zealand
O-083 Determinants of antepartum and intrapartum stillbirths in a large population-based assessment of births in the Indian state of Bihar
Rakhi Dandona, Public Health Foundation of India, India; University of Washington, USA
O-084 Monitoring stillbirths in NHS Trusts and Health Boards across the UK
Ridhi Agarwal, University of Leicester, UK
O-053 Evaluation of Stillbirth Rates following Implementation of NHS England’s Saving Babies’ Lives Care Bundle by Maternity Services in England
Alexander EP Heazell, University of Manchester, St Mary’s Hospital, UK
O-086 Improving parents’ experiences of care and support following stillbirth: a review of reviews
Alison Mcfadden, University of Dundee, UK
14:30-15:30
Parallel Session 4F
Chair: Claire Storey, UK
14:30-15:30
W-005 WORKSHOP
Post-Mortem Authorisation – Parent to Parent
Nicola Welsh, Kate George and Margaret Evans, SANDS-Lothians, UK
Parallel Session 3H
Chair: Rosemary S C Horne, Australia
O-087 Application of an Algorithm for Sudden Unexpected Infant Death Classification
O-088 Aerodynamic Parameters Governing Carbon Dioxide Rebreathing in Infants
David Greenblatt, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel
O-089 May unfavorable gene polymorphisms induce ineffective autoresuscitation, hypoxia and brain edema in SIDS?
Siri Hauge Opdal, Oslo Universtiy Hospital, Norway
O-090 Genetics of Sudden Unexpected Death in Pediatrics
Ingrid A Holm, Robert's Program on Sudden Death in Pediatrics, Division of Genetics and Genomics, USA; Boston Children's Hospital, USA; Harvard Medical, USA
O-091 Comparison of the longitudinal effects of persistent periodic breathing and apnoea on cerebral oxygenation in term and preterm-born infants
09:00-10:40
Plenary Session 7 - Prediction and Prevention
Co-Chair: Jane Norman, UK
Effects of alcohol, smoking and related adverse prenatal exposures on infant physiology
William Fifer, Columbia University, USA
Screening for fetal growth restriction: the future
Gordon Smith, Cambridge University, UK
The contribution of midwifery can to reducing preterm birth, stillbirth, and newborn deaths
Jane Sandall, Kings College London, UK
10:00-10:25
Parallel Session 5A
10:45-11:00
O-102 Maternal going-to-sleep position, interactions with indicators of fetal vulnerability and the risk of late stillbirth: the collaborative individual participant data (IPD) sleep and stillbirth (CRIBSS) meta-analysis
Robin Sarah Cronin, University of Auckland, New Zealand
11:00-11:15
O-100 The risk of late stillbirth and population attributable risk associated with small for gestational age birth according to customised and Intergrowth 21 (IG-21) birthweight centiles
Lesley M E Mccowan, University of Auckland, New Zealand
11:15-11:30
O-101 Altered fetal movements during pregnancy: How can we best educate women about getting to know their baby?
Claire Sheryn Foord, Still Aware, Australia
11:30-11:45
O-103 National consensus and pilot of parental engagement in the perinatal mortality review process (The PARENTS 2 Study)
Danya Bakhbakhi, University of Bristol, UK; North Bristol NHS Trust, UK
11:45-12:00
O-104 My Baby’s Movements: Women’s experiences of a mobile phone application aimed at reducing stillbirth by increasing awareness of fetal movements in pregnancy.
Glenn Gardener, The University of Queensland, Australia
12:00-13:00
TP-002 THEMED PANEL
Quality Improvement to save lives: One baby at a time
Bernadette Mcculloch, Cheryl Clark, Angela Cunningham, Colin Peters, Maternity & Children Quality Improvement Collaborative, Scottish Patient Safety Programme, Healthcare Improvement Scotland, UK
14:00-15:15
Plenary Session - 8 Innovation
Chair: Alexander E P Heazell, UK
Co-Chair: Carrie K Shapiro-Mendoza, USA
Parallel Session 6A
15:35-15:50
O-141 Stillbirth and Dual Prenatal Exposure to Alcohol and Cigarettes: Report of the Safe Passage Study
Hein J Odendaal, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
15:50-16:05
O-140 Combined Prenatal Alcohol and Smoking Increases the Risk for SIDS: Report of the Safe Passage Study
Robin L Haynes, Boston Children's Hospital, USA
16:05-16:20
O-142 Stillbirths preceded by reduced fetal movements are more frequently associated with placental insufficiency
Madeleine Georgette ter Kuile, University of Manchester, UK
16:20-16:35
Using Investigations after Perinatal Death to Inform Care in Future Pregnancies
Alexander E P Heazell, University of Manchester, UK
16:35-16:50
O-132 Australian Maternity care providers knowledge and messaging regarding supine sleep position
Jane Warland, University of South Australia, Australia
Closing Ceremony, Awards and Annoucement of 2020 by ISPID and ISA Chairs.
10:40-13:00
Parallel session 5B
Pathology Symposium
Sponsored by SIDS International and American SIDS Institude
Chairmen: Roger Byard, Australia and Betty McEntire, USA
Moderator: Betty McEntire, USA
10:45-11:00
Introductions & Why Pathology is Important
Betty McEntire, American SIDS Institute, USA
11:00-11:20
Neuropathology and SUID
Rita Machaalani, The University of Sydney, Australia
11:20-11:25
11:25-11:45
Genetics and SUID
Torleiv Rognum, Norway
11:45-11:50
Questions
11:50-12:10
Pathology of Co-Sleeping Infant Deaths
Roger Byard, University of Adelaide, Australia
12:10-12:15
Questions
12:15-13:00
Panel Discussion
Rick Goldstein, Marta C Cohen-UK, Rita Machaalani-Australia, Roger Byard-Australia, Torleiv Rognum-Norway
13:00-14:00
15:35-17:00
Parallel Session 6B
Chair: Tom Tuner, UK
O-143 Infant Mortality and Prenatal Care in the US
Urszula Chajewska, Microsoft, USA
15:50-16:05
16:0516:20
O-145 Making safe sleeping practical and achievable for all parents: implications for recommendations that relate to shared sleep environments
Jeanine Young, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia; Queensland Paediatric Quality Council, Australia
16:20-16:35
O-146 The English Joint Agency Response unexpected child deaths: parents’ experience and the quality of investigations
16:35-16:50
O-147 Economic evaluation of the ‘Baby Box’ intervention in preventing sudden infant death syndrome in Alberta
Delshani Yasodara Peiris, Cumming School of Medicine, Canada
Parallel Session 5C
10:40-11:45
Expecting Sunshine Documentary Film Screening
11:45-13:00
Mindfulness in times of difficulty, an introduction
Angie Cameron
15:35-17:00
Parallel session 6C
Chair: Mary Ray
O-148 Intermittent hypoxia during conditions related to an increased risk for SIDS/SUDI
Henning Wulbrand, The Eppendorf Center for Child Neurology, Germany
O-149 Cultivating Community Collaborations
Judith A Bannon, Cribs for Kids, USA
16:05-16:20
O-150 Maternal Sleep Practices and Stillbirth: Findings from an International Case-Control Study
Louise M O Brien, Sleep Disorders Center, Michigan Medicine, USA
O-151 SUID prevention strategies in France
Inge Harrewijn, Montpellier University Hospital,France
10:40-13:00
Parallel Session 5D
Chair: Margaret M Murphy, Ireland
O-105 Re-assessing Services Provided for Bereaved SIDS Parents: Professional and Parental Perspectives
Jeri E Wilson, San Diego Guild for Infant Survival, USA
O-106 Changing through pain – stories about posttraumatic growth
Trine Giving Kalstad, Norwegian SIDS and Stillbirth Society (LUB), Norway
O-107 Analysis of fifty YouTube videos in memory of stillbirth children. The new role of social websites as public virtual cemeteries
Livia Sani, University of Strasbourg, France
11:30-11:45
O-108 This isn’t a miscarriage: A qualitative interview study to understand parents’ experiences of losing a baby between 20 and 24 weeks in the UK
Lucy K Smith, University of Leicester, UK; Lisa Hinton, University of Oxford, UK
O-109 Deciding on pregnancy after loss and hoping for a born alive baby: the experiences of couples in pregnancy after stillbirth
Margaret M Murphy, University College Cork, Ireland; Cork University Maternity Hospital, Ireland; International Stillbirth Alliance
12:00-12:15
O-110 How to support parents after stillbirth – systematic literature review
12:15-12:30
O-111 The Pregnancy After Loss Journey
12:30-12:45
O-112 Returning to work while grieving
15:35-16:35
Parallel session 6D
Chair: Jillian Cassidy, UK
TP-003 THEMED PANEL
What can the autopsy tell us about stillbirth?
Marta C Cohen, Debra S Heller and Rebecca Baergen, University of Sheffield, UK
Parallel Session 5E
Chair: Adrienne Gordon, UK
O-113 Comprehensive review of the evidence regarding the effectiveness of community–based primary health care in improving maternal health to reduce stillbirths
Emma Sacks, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, USA
O-114 Analysing antenatal care pathways prior to stillbirth: A pilot study exploring the antenatal care experiences of bereaved mothers in Australia
Danielle Pollock, University of South Australia, Australia
O-115 Can A Previous Stillbirth Always Be A Predictor For Future Stillbirth ? – A Retrospective Study
Sparsha Agrawal, Delhi University, India
O-116 Reducing Risks of Stillbirth (SB) and Other Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes Among African Americans (AAs) Using Evidence-Based, Simple, Safe, Available and Actionable Personal Behavioral Life Course, Life Style, and “Self-Care” Oriented Information
James A Mcgregor, California Hospital Medical Center, USA
O-117 So you want to improve your care of the woman who has had a pregnancy loss? Education in Perinatal Bereavement for Clinical Staff in the Republic of Ireland
Karen Mcnamara, Cork University, UK; The Irish Centre for Fetal and Neonatal Translational Research (INFANT), University College Cork, UK
O-118 Maternal Obesity and Sociodemographic Risks for Late Stillbirth: Findings from the Collaborative Individual Participant data (IPD) Sleep and Stillbirth (Cribss) Meta-Analysis
Adrienne Gordon, University of Sydney, Australia
12:15-12:30
O-119 Trends on Late term Stillbirth in the US
Sushama Murthy, Microsoft Corporation, USA
O-120 Measuring the silence: development and validation of the Stillbirth Stigma Scale
12:45-13:00
O-121 Genetic investigation of fetuses before and after intrauterine fetal death – A retrospective single-center cohort study
Dana Muin, Medical University of Vienna, Austria; The University of Manchester, UK
Parallel Session 6E
O-153 Safer sleep advice: what parents and professionals want to know
Lucy Anne Lyus, The Lullaby Trust, UK
O-154 Steps to turn SUDI into a public health problem in a developing country: the Colombian experience
Maria Luisa Latorre, Juan N Corpas University Foundation, Colombia
O-155 Impact of training on a safe sleep toolkit on quality of provider and caregiver discussion
Stephanie Kuhlmann, University of Kansas School of Medicine, USA
O-156 Charlie's Kids and the Intercept of Safe Sleep Education and Childhood Literacy: An Effective Approach for Timely Messaging
Samuel Hanke, Charlie's Kids Foundation, USA; Cincinnati Children's Hospital, USA
O-157 Sudden Unexpected Infant Death in Mexico 2016
Gonzalo Arroyo Diaz, University of Guanajuato, Mexico
Parallel Session 5F
Chair: Francine Louden Bates, UK
O-122 Managing families with recurrent SIDS: international collaboration, new diagnoses and ethical challenges
Joanna Garstang, Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Trust, UK; Warwick Medical School, UK
O-123 Research priorities in sudden infant death: using the international consensus
Francine Loudon Bates, The Lullaby Trust, UK
O-125 State Variations in Sudden Unexpected Infant Death Codes
Richard Johnston, Microsoft Corporation, USA
O-126 Safe Sleep campaign in health center waiting rooms
Allegra Bonomi, Semi per la SIDS Onlus, Italy
O-127 The social determinants of health for Indigenous peoples and “Triple-Risk Model” for SIDS: a socio-ecological health perspective for safe sleep education
Delshani Yasodara Peiris, Cumming School of Medicine, Canada; University of Calgary, Canada
O-128 Immunization status and occurrence of Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID)
O-129 Infections and sudden unexpected infant death: a cohort study in France
Floriane Ducert, Aix-Marseille University, France
O-130 The impact of implementing a sudden infant death syndrome education package in Jordan
Shereen Hamadneh, Al-alBayt University, Jordan
13:00-14:00
Lunch/Exhibitors/Posters
Parallel Session 6F
Chair: Glenn Gardener, UK
O-158 Development of a standardised approach to classification of stillbirth and neonatal death in data-rich settings: The Cork Classification Consensus 2017 and Glasgow 2018 Progress
Jessica Sexton, The University of Queensland (MRI-UQ), Australia
O-159 Identifying subgroups of women most at risk of stillbirth in England using Latent Class Analysis
Ruth J Matthews, University of Leicester, UK
O-160 Pathways of association between first trimester haemoglobin concentration and risk of stillbirth: a path-analysis of data from a multi-ethnic maternity population in England, suggesting possible new areas for investigation
David Churchill, The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust, New Cross Hospital, UK
O-161 Prenatal-onset Group B Strep (POGBS) Sepsis Is a Distinct Cause of Perinatal Mortality/Morbidity
O-162 Pre-Discharge Screening Trans-Cutaneous Bilirubinometry in Newborns in Rooming-in
Cesar Ivan Garcia Gonzalez, University of Guanajuato, Mexico
Parallel Session 5G
Chair: Tom Turner, UK
O-131 Straight Talk for Safe Infant Sleep
Barbara Ann Himes, First Candle, USA
O-133 Safer Sleep Week: a national SIDS awareness-raising campaign
O-134 Impact of a Safe Sleep Intervention on Mothers Falling Asleep While Feeding
O-135 Three cases of life-threatening positional asphyxia
Alessandro Vigo, Regina Margherita Children Hospital, Italy
O-136 Conversations about safe sleep: perspectives from mothers and health professionals
Anna S Pease, University of Bristol, UK
O-137 The Dutch 11th safe sleeping survey; factors with a potential risk for suffocation
Monique Pauline Lhoir, Wageningen University & Research, The Netherlands
O-138 An Evaluation of the Cribs for Kids® Model: Ten Year Review of Outcomes for Pack ‘N Play Use and Safe Sleep
Michael Howard Goodstein, York Hospital, USA
O-139 Leveraging the Safe Sleep Instructor Infrastructure to Expand Community Baby Showers State-wide
Christy Schunn, Kansas Infant Death and SIDS Network, USA
Parallel Session 6G
Chair: Barbara Ann Himes, USA
O-163 The impact of birth and death registration in the UK on parents’ experiences of losing a baby between 20 and 24 weeks of pregnancy: A qualitative interview study
15:50-16:05
O-164 No time to say goodbye: does medicolegal infant death investigation provide adequate care for suddenly bereaved parents?
16:05-16:20
O-165 Parents tell their stories
Dirk Gerardus Ploegmakers, VOWK, Dutch Parent Association, The Netherlands
16:20-16:35
O-166 Sudden unexpected infant death - a study of the impact on intergenerational relationships