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Residues and remains: an anthropology of practices around pregnancy endings

Understanding the practices around miscarriage

Dandelion Project January 2019 - 2026

Funded by the Wellcome Trust as part of a University Award in the Humanities and Social Sciences (Grant number: 212731).

The research explores the practices around pregnancy endings and their remains, including acts of forgetting and remembering, and asks what do these reveal about the status of foetuses, women and mothers in contemporary England?

Pregnancy endings provide opportunities to interrogate anthropological assumptions about the contemporary family, motherhood, personhood and kinship. To analyse this, I will focus on the practices in the aftermath of a pregnancy ending to understand what they reveal about the values afforded to the remains in different contexts (clinic, home, burial site, crematorium, grave site etc) and by different stakeholders. My research will explore how reactions to and practices around pregnancy endings and remains reflect wider cultural trends in the UK, particularly around motherhood as highly moralized and notions of foetal personhood. I ask how does grief (or the absence of it) intersect with the relationship of the materiality of the remains and the woman鈥檚 body.

The research involves in-depth, embedded and analytic ethnography at and Early Pregnancy Assessment Unit (EPAU) in England and other relevant clinical, community and domestic sites.

Project members
Advisory Board

The project includes a group of academics and stakeholders who will help to inform the project throughout its duration.The Board consists of:

  • Prof Naomi Pfeffer
  • , Director of Operations British Pregnancy Advisory Service
  • , National Director of Miscarriage Association
Objectives
  • By focusing on remains and associated rituals, as well their absence, I explore what work is being done by such practices.
  • The physical matter of remains (both as part of the woman鈥檚 body and separate), but also emotional remnants (hope, anticipation, investment) of pregnancy endings will be explored.
  • Explore how reactions to and practices around pregnancy endings reflect wider cultural trends in England including the contemporary context of 鈥榓nxious reproduction鈥 (Faircloth and Gurtin 2017) and motherhood as highly moralized (Faircloth 2013; Taylor 2008; Gammeltoft 2007).
  • How does grief (or the absence of it) intersect with the relationship of the materiality of the foetus and the woman鈥檚 body.
  • To widen the discussion of miscarriage to include remnants more broadly: I explore both the materiality of remains and the imaginations linked to them.
  • Interrogate whether national guidance and local policy is in line with women鈥檚 requirements by considering complex and diverse expressions of pregnancy endings.
  • Assess the Human Tissue Authority (HTA) Guidance on pregnancy remains and local policy and contribute to revisions, if necessary.
  • I seek to understand what practices reveal about the values afforded remains in different contexts (clinic, home, burial site, crematorium etc) and by different stakeholders.
News

Health Research Authority Ethics approvals (IRAS Reference: 261330, Research and Development Reference: 14448, Research Ethics Committee Reference: 19/SC/0428) and subsequent site approvals were received in January 2020. Fieldwork/ data collection is now underway.

Publications
  • Kilshaw, S. (forthcoming). 鈥淚t鈥檚 a clump of cells that has hopes and dreams attached to it鈥 but it鈥檚 not a baby鈥: The insensitivity of 鈥渟ensitive鈥 care, bureaucracy of pregnancy tissue disposal in England, UK. Anthropology and Medicine.
  • Kilshaw S. (2024) Women鈥檚 experiences of the consenting process for pregnancy remains disposal following early miscarriage BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health 2024;50:99-106.
  • Kilshaw, S. (2024). 鈥楴ow I鈥檓 a weird mother who doesn鈥檛 care鈥: Women鈥檚 experiences of pregnancy remains disposal following miscarriage in England. Mortality, 1鈥18. 听
  • Middlemiss, A. L., & Kilshaw, S. (2023). Further Hierarchies of Loss: Tracking Relationality in Pregnancy Loss Experiences. OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying. doi:10.1177/00302228231182273

Online publications:

  • Kilshaw, S. (2024) 5 misconceptions about miscarriage.
  • Kilshaw, S. (2023). Nine women share what it's like to have a miscarriage. The Conversation. Retrieved from
  • Kilshaw, S., & Middlemiss, A. (2022). Sharing the burden of miscarriage knowledge. Retrieved from
Events and activities

We are dedicated to ensuring the research findings are able to make a difference to the care of women experiencing pregnancy ends. Over the past year we have been engaging the local NHS trust where the project was based and are working with them to change their policies and practices around pregnancy tissue disposal. We have organised a series of workshops , which have brought together NHS early pregnancy experts, pregnancy loss charities, and national bodies to discuss the research findings. In the final workshop we worked as a team to revise two of the most influential national guidance on pregnancy tissue disposal practices. To support this work we were awarded additional funding to support knowledge exchange and impact activities:

  • 2023听 听Research England鈥檚 Higher Education Innovation Fund (HEIF), administered by 果冻影院 Innovation &Enterprise (拢14 420) 鈥楧eveloping consistency in pregnancy remains disposal consent process鈥.
  • 2023听 听果冻影院, Innovation in Women鈥檚 Health Grant, Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Impact Acceleration Account (IAA) (Grant Reference EP/X525649/1) (拢4000). 鈥楴atural Cycles Miscarriage Care: Providing information, education, and support for Cyclers experiencing miscarriage鈥.