BILL CREATES SPECIAL DEATH CERTIFICATE FOR
STILLBORN INFANTS
By Rick Collins
STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE
Rick.Collins@statehousenews.com
STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, JULY 25, 2002.....Minutes before Lynn Barberian gave birth
in April 2000, doctors detected a heartbeat coming from her soon-to-be-born
daughter. But then something tragic happened and Barbarian's first child was
delivered stillborn.
Later, when she was putting together a small scrapbook and went to get a copy of
her daughter's birth certificate from the local clerk, the Medford resident was
stunned and hurt to find out there wouldn't be one because her baby hadn't lived
for an hour outside of the womb.
"I carried her full term, for 40 weeks like any other woman, spent hours in
labor pushing, went through the whole delivery just like a regular birth, except
I didn't bring a baby home alive," she said. "I gave birth and they were saying,
'No you didn't.'" Barberian said the news set her back in
recovering from the tragedy, but she used the event to spark legislation that
could ensure hundreds of other Massachusetts parents don't experience the same
shock.
The House is poised to adopt a bill Barberian proposed creating a birth
certificate for stillborns. It is based on similar laws passed in Arizona, Utah
and Indiana. Under the so-called "Missing Angels" bill, parents who lose a child
after 20 weeks of gestation could receive a "Certificate of
Birth Resulting in Stillborn Birth" from the state Registry of Vital Records,
and have the option of naming their child. The bill has a retroactivity clause,
but certificates issued more than a year after the death will be marked with the
word "delayed."
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Charles Shannon (D-Winchester), has already passed
the Senate, and was initially approval by the House on Wednesday. Supporters say
it will help parents in their recovery by giving them something other than a
fetal death report, which is the current formal
record for stillbirths. "A woman goes through the entire process of birth, the
contractions and
everything...By giving a report of fetal death to the family, and no birth
certificate, you're not recognizing the process of birth the woman went through
for nine months," said Rep. Garrett Bradley (D-Hingham), the lead House sponsor.
The bill originally raised some origin of life questions, but Bradley said the
bill contains language defining fetal death that makes aborted fetuses
ineligible for a certificate. "It does not change the definition of fetal death
at all," he said. "It has absolutely nothing to do with abortion."
Neither the pro-life Massachusetts Catholic Conference nor the pro-choice state
chapter of the National Abortion Rights Action League oppose the bill. "This
appropriately responds to the needs of these parents," said MCC lobbyist Gerry
D'Avolio. The bill passed the Senate via a voice vote, and House Republican
leaders said they don't anticipate a floor battle. "It doesn't seem to be that
unreasonable," said Assistant Minority Leader Rep. Bradley Jones (R-North
Reading). A spokeswoman for Acting Gov. Jane Swift said the governor would
consider the bill when it reaches her desk, but had no immediate comment.