N.S. mother seeks improved government support for grieving parents
A Nova Scotia woman who recently lost two children will be heading to Ottawa this month to urge the federal government to give more support to parents dealing with the loss of a child or pregnancy.
Paula Harmon of Dartmouth, N.S., said there’s little access to specific groups to cope with losing a pregnancy or baby, and those parents may feel out of place in standard support groups.
“There are bereavement groups, but a parent who has lost a child at 17 weeks, or 20 weeks, or even a year, feels very out of step with a parent who has had a child for 30 years,” she said in a phone interview Saturday. “So they’re sitting there with people who have actually had a lifetime of memories and they can’t relate.”
Harmon’s pregnancy with fraternal twins in 2013 came as an “unexpected surprise,” but at 17 weeks gestation, one of them died and the other was given a five per cent chance of survival.


