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Interpreting Australian Stillbirth Rate Trends: Implications for Surveillance and Continuous Quality Improvement

Aleena M. Wojcieszek, Kirstine Sketcher-Baker, Christine Andrews, Michael Coory, Imogen Kettle, Melissa Malivoire, David Ellwood, Vicki Flenady
Correspondence: vicki.flenady@mater.uq.edu.au
Med J Aust 2026; 224 (6) || doi: 10.5694/mja2.70223
Published online: 10 June 2026

Abstract

Reports of rising stillbirth rates in Australia have generated concern among affected parents and other stakeholders. Review of the national data suggests that much of the rise is being driven by an increase in terminations of pregnancy after 20 weeks' gestation. This increase coincides with legislative changes expanding access to terminations beyond 20 weeks. Alongside publishing stillbirth rates according to the legal definition (stillbirths from 20 weeks' gestation including terminations of pregnancy), national reporting bodies should routinely publish stillbirth rates among births from 28 weeks' gestation excluding terminations of pregnancy as the latter is most relevant to Australia's current stillbirth prevention initiatives.

  • Aleena M. Wojcieszek, Kirstine Sketcher-Baker, Christine Andrews, Michael Coory, Imogen Kettle, Melissa Malivoire, David Ellwood, Vicki Flenady




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