The Smallest Things Manifesto 2024

 
 

Supporting families after neonatal intensive care and improving the long-term health and educational outcomes of children born prematurely. 

The new government has the opportunity to change the lives of the more than 50,000 children born prematurely each year. By taking simple steps, it can support families on a journey we know lasts long after leaving neonatal intensive care.

I feel that I ran on adrenaline during the eight weeks that my boy was in the NICU and it hit me like a bus once we returned home – anxiety, postnatal depression, PTSD. I think the lack of understanding from some relations was a big factor in this. Also, the reality of all myself and my baby had been through only hit then too.
— Mother of very preterm baby

Each year in the UK approximately 50,000 babies are born prematurely (prior to 37 weeks’ gestation). Following an often sudden and traumatic birth, a baby is taken straight to the neonatal intensive care unit, marking the beginning of an agonising journey of separation, anxiety and uncertainty for parents and carers.

Prematurity doesn’t end, however, when parents and carers bring their baby or babies home from hospital. While recovering from the trauma of neonatal intensive care, parents are at much greater risk of mental health problems, children are frequently re-admitted to hospital, and parents tell us that their needs are often overlooked.


We call on the new government to commit to: