Bereavement leave to be extended to miscarriages before 24 weeks
The government is set to amend the Employment Rights Bill to give parents the legal right to take time off work to grieve if they experience pregnancy loss at any stage.
As it stands, bereavement leave is only available to parents who lose an unborn child after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said the change will give "people time away from work to grieve".
"No one who is going through the heartbreak of pregnancy loss should have to go back to work before they are ready," Rayner said.
Parents are currently entitled to a fortnight's leave if they suffer pregnancy loss after 24 weeks, or if a child younger than 18 dies.
The extended right to leave will be for "at least" one week, though the exact length is still being consulted on.
The Employment Rights Bill, which includes further measures to protect in law the right of employees to have time off to grieve the loss of a loved one, is already making its way through Parliament.
Labour MP Sarah Owen, who chairs the Women and Equalities Committee, has previously campaigned for the change.
In 2021, she told MPs that after her own miscarriage she felt physically better in a few days but had "all the classic signs" of grieving.
"I could not eat, I could not sleep. I really did not hold much hope that life would ever get brighter," she said.
In March, business minister Justin Madders told MPs he accepted the principle of bereavement leave for pregnancy loss and promised to look at adding the right to the Employment Rights Bill.
Vicki Robinson, chief executive of the Miscarriage Association, welcomed the announcement.
She said it was "a hugely important step that acknowledges the often very significant impact of pre-24-week loss, not only for those experiencing the physical loss, but for their partners too".
Government backs miscarriage bereavement leave
Paid leave for bereaved parents is 'crucial'
'I went back after 3 days': Calls for miscarriage bereavement leave
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Entrepreneur
20 minutes ago
- Entrepreneur
Rebuilding Cancer Care from the Ground Up
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. You're reading Entrepreneur United Kingdom, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. In healthcare, timing is everything. But for Kelly McCabe, co-founder of Perci Health and a former oncology clinician, the real urgency lay not in the cancer treatments themselves - but in what was being left behind. "After 15 years working in cancer care, I saw firsthand how fractured and reactive the system was," McCabe says. "People received excellent treatment for their cancer, but everything else was fragmented or missing altogether." Side effects. Mental health. Long-term fatigue. The emotional and physical ripple effects of cancer often remain unaddressed, even as survival rates improve. It was that disconnect that drove McCabe to rethink what post-treatment support could - and should - look like. "No one was joining the dots between early risk factors, side effects, mental health, fatigue, or what happens after treatment ends," she adds. "The system wasn't built to support the whole person. Survivorship numbers were rising, but outcomes weren't improving." That insight led to the launch of Perci Health, a virtual cancer survivorship clinic offering personalised, multidisciplinary care beyond the hospital walls. The timing, McCabe says, crystallised when she met her co-founder, Morgan. n"She brought a deep understanding of digital transformation and consumer behaviour; skills I knew were essential to building something that was not only clinically rigorous but also scalable, accessible, and genuinely patient-first." Together, they built what McCabe says the system "wasn't going to build for us." AI With a Human Touch Unlike many digital health companies rushing to automate care, Perci is using AI to augment clinical expertise, not replace it. "We're using AI to move from reactive to truly proactive personalised care," McCabe explains. "Our platform continuously captures symptom, behavioural, and clinical data to adapt each person's care plan in real time." This means patients are matched with specialists - from psychologists to fatigue experts - according to their evolving needs. "This isn't about replacing clinical judgement; it's about scaling it," she says. "AI allows us to deliver bespoke care at scale, ensuring people don't just survive cancer - they recover well, return to life, and avoid preventable complications." The Trust Factor Still, scaling a virtual clinic in a highly regulated space comes with high stakes - and high expectations. For Perci, building trust wasn't a marketing task. It was structural. "From day one, we built Perci as a healthcare provider, not a wellness app," McCabe says. "That meant robust clinical governance, evidence-based care, and a specialist-only team." Perci's model, while medically grounded, has also required re-education. "Cancer is not yet seen as a chronic condition and our approach is a novel way to manage complex side effects," she adds. "It's taken real focus to make our model clear without oversimplifying what is a very sophisticated, multi-specialist approach." Redefining Leadership McCabe's own journey as a founder includes an experience still rarely discussed in startup circles: raising investment while pregnant. "It taught me what real leadership looks like," she reflects. "Leadership isn't about doing everything yourself, it's about building the kind of team and culture that can carry momentum, even when you need to step back." She credits both her co-founder and Perci's investors for creating the conditions for that to be possible. "That kind of support is essential when you're doing something innovative, and often, uncomfortable for the status quo." It also reframed her view of leadership itself. "Raising while pregnant showed me that leadership doesn't have to follow traditional patterns. It can be shared. It can be vulnerable. And it can be stronger because of it." Backing by Macmillan - and What It Signals A major milestone came when Macmillan Cancer Support invested in Perci through its Innovation Impact Fund. "It was a huge moment, for us and for the sector," McCabe says. "Their investment wasn't just capital, it was a vote of confidence in clinically grounded, tech-enabled models that address the human side of cancer." To her, the partnership represents a broader shift in the ecosystem. "It signals a shift: the idea that charities and digital health companies don't sit on opposite sides of the table anymore. We're both working toward better outcomes and increasingly, we're doing it together." A System Still in Progress Despite Perci's momentum, McCabe is clear-eyed about the complexities of healthcare innovation - and the patience it demands. "You can't assume the system is set up to pay for the kind of innovation you're building," she says. "We've had to reimagine how value is measured, how outcomes are proven, and how care gets paid for." The advice she gives to other founders in slow-moving sectors? Don't fight the system - work with it. "Respect the complexity of healthcare. Build evidence as you go. And stay open to new models that might not exist yet, but will, if you're willing to build them with the right people."


Bloomberg
28 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Gilt Market Tumult Signals Worse to Come
How many warnings from the bond market does this Labour government need? The stumble last week by Prime Minister Keir Starmer failing initially to give his full-throated backing to Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves caused a sharp selloff in UK government gilts, which mostly unwound in the days that followed, but it still left 30-year yields 10 basis points higher.


Bloomberg
35 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
UK Business Leaders Are ‘Struggling to See What's Business-Friendly' About Labour
Before taking office last July, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves met business leaders over a series of breakfasts that became known as the smoked salmon and scrambled eggs offensive. British bosses were clamoring for change after 14 years of rule by the opposition Conservative party, and her pitch went down well. But a year on from the Labour Party's landslide election win, that initial optimism has been replaced by discontent over tax increases, persistent red tape and a lack of dialogue with the government. A spike in borrowing costs and a lack of economic growth haven't helped matters. Companies say they are being forced to cut jobs, delay investment — and in some cases, move their listings altogether.