Sudden Unexpected Death in Childhood Debate

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Department: Department of Health and Social Care

Sudden Unexpected Death in Childhood

Michelle Welsh Excerpts
Tuesday 24th March 2026

(1 day, 8 hours ago)

Westminster Hall
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Michelle Welsh Portrait Michelle Welsh (Sherwood Forest) (Lab)
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir John. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Rossendale and Darwen (Andy MacNae) for securing this important debate.

There can be no greater devastation than the death of a child, but for many families the pain is made even more unbearable by one word: unexplained. When a child dies without answers, the grief does not settle. It lingers, it questions and it haunts. Parents are left asking themselves the same questions over and over: “What happened, and why don’t we know?”

I have spoken to a local family living with that reality—a family who are not just grieving, but searching for answers, understanding and peace. When this happens, families encounter a system that is broken and fragmented, investigations that take too long, communication that is unclear and support that falls away when it is needed the most. We must do better.

We need a national plan and improved data collection to identify patterns and risk factors. Every unexplained death in childhood must be treated with the seriousness it deserves—not just as a case to be closed but as a life that mattered, with a family who need answers. That means timely, thorough and transparent investigations; clear communication with families at every stage; ensuring that bereavement support is not an afterthought but a core part of care; and providing training for healthcare professionals, coroners and the police. This is not just about understanding why a child died; it is about helping families with such a tragic loss.

We owe it to those children and families to learn everything we can, to be honest about what we find and to ensure that no parent is left alone in their search for answers. We can, and must, ensure that no family is left in the dark. When a child dies, the silence that follows should never be from a system that was meant to provide the answers.