In suburban Melbourne there is a garden that looks just like any other.
It’s lush and green after plenty of recent rain. It’s lined with trees and flowers. And it has chairs on which passers-by can sit and reflect.
But it is also the final resting place of the majority of terminated and miscarried babies from the country’s largest specialist public hospital for women and newborns.
Dr Paddy Moore, head of the early pregnancy service at Melbourne’s Royal Women’s Hospital, told Mamamia that the hospital’s ‘default’ position for the disposal of foetal tissue, where women did not make a choice or said “do what you usually do”, was cremating and scattering it at a garden in suburban Melbourne.
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Compared to the days when stillborn (at full term babies were put in the garbage (as my grandmothers first born was), I am incredibly impressed with this.
We chose to donate our baby's tissue and organs for medical research. At least then some good might come from it. Love the garden, what a beautiful idea. I can't say enough good things about all the staff at the Royal Women's, they were all so wonderful.