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exploring the stigma around baby loss

9/25/2016

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The Good Funeral Guide have published this blog about Still Loved. 

“The subject matter of Still Loved is emotionally challenging, it should be, this is not a film to make the viewer feel comfortable. To make progress, we must break the silence, the stigma and the taboo that surrounds the death of a baby, Still Loved begins this process it provides an accessible, original and profound insight into the effects of the death of a baby.”

Alexandra Heazell, Senior Clinical Lecturer in Obstetrics and Clinical Director of the Tommy’s Maternal and Fetal Health Research Centre

Read the full article HERE

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Standard issues magazine article

9/23/2016

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Stanard Issue on line Magazine have published this article about Still Loved, featuring Beth Morris from our film. She discusses the loss of her twin girls Harriet and Felicity and why she and her husband Steve decided to take part in Still Loved.

"To them it was merely a bump, a bump that can be replaced. Funny, isn’t it: if someone’s brother, mother, friend died, you wouldn’t tell them it’s OK, you can have another, would you?"

Read the full article on line HERE
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Tommy's quest to support still loved continues

9/15/2016

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Tommy's Baby Charity are continuing their incredible support to help us get Still Loved on screens around the UK.

Read their first blog about supporting our film click HERE

Read their second blog about why Still Loved needs to be on our screens HERE

Big thanks to the team at Tommy's for being behind us all the way with Still Loved. It's much appreciated.

About Tommy's:


"Tommy's charity exists to save babies' lives. We are the largest UK charity funding research into the causes and prevention of pregnancy complications that lead to miscarriage, stillbirth and premature birth. We also provide pregnancy health information for parents-to-be. We are committed to changing the statistics in the UK, where 1 in 4 pregnancies end in baby loss.  To this day, the UK has one of the highest stillbirths rates in Europe, with 3,500 babies born sleeping every year. That’s 3,500 devastated families who cannot bring their baby home.
 
That’s why we are supporting the release of ‘Still Loved’. This powerful documentary unflinchingly confronts the grief and heartache that stillbirth brings, and the incredible ways parents across the country are striving to help families affected by loss like their own.  Parents deserve answers: this documentary brilliantly confronts a largely silenced issue and demonstrates why more research into the cause and prevention of stillbirth is urgently needed. "



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