Why is this important?
Babies, and their families, have the best possible outcomes when their parents can be partners in care. This can mean:
- Parents take the lead in caring for their baby - including changing, washing and feeding their baby.
- Parents can lead on more complicated skills such as giving some medicines to their baby, or tube feeding them.
- Doing skin-to-skin and comfort holding their baby
- Working with the medical team to make shared decisions about their baby's care
Benefits of this may include:
- Babies gain more weight
- Earlier discharge home
- Improved breastmilk feeding
- Reduced pain during painful procedures
- Better gross motor development at 4-5 years
This type of care also helps parents to feel like parents, and to support strong bonds.
But achieving these impacts relies on families being able to spend long, uninterrupted time with their baby - and costs limit this time for many families.
Help us get families the extra support they need.
Why is neonatal care so expensive?
Extra costs come from:
- Parents needing to pay for extra travel to and from the neonatal unit - which can be far from home
- Paying for food and drink on the hospital site
- Paying for accommodation to stay close to the hospital
- Needing to pay for childcare for older children who may not be allowed on the neonatal unit.
On top of this, many families find their household income drops significantly as they are forced to take parental leave and pay, or just take time off work unpaid altogether.
Will you take action to help families now?
How is the cost-of-living crisis affecting families right now?
In Autumn 2022, Bliss surveyed 168 parents about increasing costs. We found:
- For families with a baby still in neonatal care, more than half said costs were affecting their ability to pay rent, bills or mortgage and 84% said it had impacted their ability to travel to and from the hospital
- 3 in 4 parents whose baby had been discharged in the last year felt it was likely that the cost of energy could stop them from keeping their house warm this winter
- Nearly half of families who said they were running medical equipment at home said they were concerned that the cost of energy might impact their ability to run this equipment in the future.