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WASHINGTON — Adding to the devastation of her daughter Clare’s being stillborn is the fact that Erin Fogarty Owen doesn’t know why: What went wrong in a pregnancy that seemed textbook? And that unknown means Owen is facing her new pregnancy with as much fear as joy, repeating what she calls sanity sonograms for reassurance that this baby’s still fine.

More than 25,000 U.S. babies a year are stillborn, and in more than a third of the cases doctors can’t find an explanation. New guidelines for obstetricians aim to help change that with an often-taboo recommendation: Gently urge more parents to accept an autopsy to help unravel this mystery killer, so that maybe doctors can start preventing it.

Even an autopsy doesn’t always give an answer. It didn’t explain why Clare Owen died.

The hope is that if more are performed — and done better, to the same set of standards — scientists might finally have enough tests to compare and uncover risk factors.

“We need some answers,” says Owen, of Arlington, Va. “It all starts at the bedside of the grieving parent who’s just been told her baby is dead.”

The new guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists come as bereaved parents and child advocates are pushing to break the silence that surrounds those deaths.

“People don’t want to frighten their patients near the end of pregnancy,” says Dr. Ruth Fretts of Harvard Medical School. “We’ve been afraid to talk about it.”

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