Longer mat leave for preemie mums: 5 Reasons why!

Not many people know – if your baby is born too soon your maternity leaves begins the very next day. For many mothers this is weeks, often months before they bring their baby home from hospital – weeks, often months before their planned due date.

The Smallest Things believe that maternity leave should be extended for mothers of very premature babies – here are just five of the reasons why we think you should support this change too!

1. Financial – Be it travel, parking, accommodation, extra childcare or meals, the cost of having a premature baby in neonatal care soon adds up. Latest figures suggest that on average parents of premature babies spend an extra £2,256 over the course of their hospital stay. In addition there is little financial support for parents whose babies have been born too soon. For example, you cannot apply for the disability living allowance and the flexibility of taking paid, unpaid or sick leave from work is not possible – maternity leave begins automatically the day after birth. Parents have enough uncertainly, worry and stress, without the added pressure of wondering if they can afford to visit their baby in hospital.

2. Bonding – Mothers of babies born too smallest thingssoon face the agonising journey of leaving hospital without their baby day after day. Any NICU mum will tell you, there is a lot of watching and waiting in neonatal care – waiting for that first precious hold, usually days, sometimes weeks after their baby is born. Then watching and waiting for more holds, a chance to change a nappy through an incubator porthole or an opportunity to hold an NG tube as drops of milk pass through a tube into their baby’s tiny tummy. NICU is not an environment conducive to mother and baby bonding. In fact, with the bells and buzzers, tubes and monitors, it is not an environment conducive to becoming a mother at all! It can be months before a baby born prematurely comes home. Months where precious time to bond has been lost and a lost time many mothers morn. Extending maternity leave cannot give back this lost time, but it can give added time; precious time in which to spend at home to bond, benefiting both mum and baby greatly.

3. Development – Premature babies are babies for longer, developing according to their ‘corrected’ age, (calculated according to their due date) rather than their chronological age. This sees parents of premature babies returning to work when their baby is physically and emotionally less developed than a baby born on their due date. This can be a worrying time for parents, many of whom would not have planned to leave their baby when they were still so small and so dependent, and particularly worrying for parents whose baby, like many, has ongoing medical concerns and regular hospital appointments.

4. Maternal Mental Health – Studies repeatedly show that the risk of depression and anxiety is higher for mothers who have spent time in neonatal care, with many reporting symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Reducing the financial burden by extending statutory maternity pay and giving back precious time to bond can help to ease worries and strengthen relationships; but most importantly it would allow time to grieve, to process and to recognise the symptoms of PTSD or depression. In turn, time would be available for mothers to seek and to receive the much needed support.

5. Employment – Mothers often have plans of when and how they will return to work. When a baby is born unexpectedly early these plans for many no longer seem appropriate. For example, a mother who planned to take six months leave will discover that at 6 months her premature baby is only three months old according to their corrected age. Regular hospital follow up appointments, the risk of colds, coughs and flu, ongoing medical difficulties and maternal mental health all impact on a mothers ability to return to work. Extending maternity leave would give mothers the time to plan, prepare and for them and their baby to be stronger, enabling them to return to work successfully and in line with their original wishes.

Change is possible.

With a precedent set in other European countries we are calling for the UK to be next!

If you agree that parental leave should be extended for mothers of babies born prematurely, please sign and share our petition – SIGN NOW!

 

 

8 thoughts on “Longer mat leave for preemie mums: 5 Reasons why!

  1. Mama

    Wow, I never thought about this but you’re absolutely right! Maybe an online petition would help raise awareness for your cause?
    #sharewithme

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  2. Emma

    My daughter was a premature and cardiac so I completely agree. However I think you mean a “precedent” set not “president” 🙂

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  3. Catriona Ogilvy Post author

    Reblogged this on The Smallest Things and commented:

    With MPs returning to parliament today, here is a reminder of what we are campaigning for….
    5 reasons to extend maternity leave for mothers of babies born too soon – have you contacted your member of parliament and shared your story?

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  4. Alastair

    Totally agree, however… Spare a thought for the fathers, who only get 2 weeks paternity leave, and generally have to bear the burden of the household finances whilst the mother is on maternity leave, and is also going through the anxiety of prem baby alongside the mother. I speak from experience having had a 3 month prem baby born at just 604g.

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  5. BabyMaybe

    Yes!

    Could I also add that for some of us maternity leave didn’t start the day after the baby was born but long before. If you’re ill at the end of the pregnancy it starts early automatically. So as I had a month of hospital bed rest my mat leave started at 29 weeks pregnant then the baby was born at 33 weeks.

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