Presenters: Susannah Leisher, PhD; Keelin O’Donoghue; Siobhan Loughnan; & Vicki Flenady
Date: 10/10/25
Brief Description: Discusses an overview of global bereavement care pathways. The presentation from Professor Keelin O’Donoghue and the Pregnancy Loss Research Group is not included in this recording.
Keywords/Main Subjects: Bereavement, care pathways, global health
Copyright: copyright Susannah Leisher, Keelin O’Donoghue, Siobhan Loughnan, & Vicki Flenady © 2025

Susannah (Zan) Hopkins Leisher is a stillbirth epidemiologist and parent to Wilder Daniel, stillborn at 38½ weeks on July 13, 1999, with no cause found. Her stillbirth research interests include structural racism and epigenetic mechanisms of effect. Dr Leisher is working to launch the first Stillbirth Center of Excellence in the United States. She is an honorary research fellow of the Stillbirth Centre for Research Excellence at the University of Queensland, Australia; ex-officio chair of the International Stillbirth Alliance; co-chair of the Stillbirth Advocacy Working Group; and a member of the Steering Committee of AlignMNH, the MFMU Network’s Community Engagement Board, and the WHO/UNICEF’s Every Woman Every Newborn Everywhere Management Team. Prior to becoming an epidemiologist, Dr Leisher was a Peace Corps volunteer in Nepal and then spent over 20 years working on global poverty and social justice in Asia, Africa and Central America, including ten years in Vietnam.

Professor Keelin O’Donoghue and the Pregnancy Loss Research Group at the University College Cork are national researchers working to understand pregnancy loss experiences and impacts. They have developed evidence-based advice, resources, and interventions to improve healthcare quality and social outcomes for families.

Siobhan is a Senior Research Fellow and Co-Lead of the Care Around Stillbirth and Neonatal Death program at the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Stillbirth in Brisbane Australia. She is a registered provisional psychologist and her work spans clinical guideline development, education, global collaborations, and digital resources to support both bereaved parents and the healthcare professionals who care for them.

Professor Flenady is co-director of the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Stillbirth at Mater Research, University of Queensland, Australia, and is a nationally and internationally recognized perinatal epidemiologist. She is well-known for her expertise in Cochrane systematic reviews, clinical trials and the development and implementation of high-quality clinical practice guidelines. With a background in midwifery and neonatal nursing, clinical epidemiology and biostatistics, her research is now devoted to stillbirth prevention through improving identification and care for women with risk factors and improving data quality to drive change. Prof Flenady also has a major interest in improving care for parents whose child is stillborn, including in a subsequent pregnancy. She is a past chair of the International Stillbirth Alliance, and was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for her research into stillbirth in 2024.










