Fiona Bruce MP raises concerns about crippling financial costs for parents of premature and sick babies at parliamentary event
Fiona Bruce MP attended a reception last week to support the launch of the report by Bliss, the special care baby charity called ‘It’s not a game: the very real costs of having a premature or sick baby’, which is based on a survey of over 1300 parents and 178 hospitals in England, Scotland and Wales. The report found that:
- Parents of a baby admitted to neonatal care face extra costs amounting to £2,256 during their baby’s stay in hospital, averaging £282 per week.
- Costs such as paying for food and drinks averaged £53 a week, while parents faced travel costs including petrol and parking averaging over £100 per week.
- Three quarters of parents reported that their household finances were worsened, while one in five couldn’t afford to pay bills such as their rent or mortgage.
- Alongside the financial burden is the cost to parent’s health, with almost two thirds of parents reporting that their mental health had worsened as a result of the extra pressure.
The charity wants more to be done to help families who face these issues and wants parents travelling more than 20 miles to see their baby in hospital to have their costs reimbursed and believes that they should also have access to free parking and accommodation so they can be near their baby, as well as meals provided and access to childcare at the hospital.
Fiona Bruce MP commented: “One in nine babies in Congleton is admitted to specialist hospital care each year and more than one local family has contacted me concerned about the additional pressures of having a premature baby. I am, therefore, delighted to support Bliss to ensure all babies born premature and sick and their families get the vital support they need and to help families concentrate on their baby instead of worrying about their finances.”
Bliss Campaigns and Policy Manager Rebecca Rennison said, ‘We are really grateful to Fiona Bruce MP for supporting our campaign launch. Bliss is urging the Government to provide more help to families in what is an extremely difficult time. At Bliss we know that families have more than enough things to worry about when their baby is in hospital. Whether they can afford to be there shouldn’t be one of them.’