About the Programme
This section explains the history of the National Child Mortality Database project and provides access to further relevant resources.
The Evolution of the National Child Mortality Database
The child death review process in England began on 1 April 2008. This was the result of two high profile miscarriages of justice which led to the convictions, and subsequent exonerations of Angela Cannings and Sally Clark. Professor Peter Fleming was the paediatrician whose work on investigating the deaths of children who die suddenly and unexpectedly (sometimes referred to as “cot death”) played a key role in securing the exonerations of these two mothers who had been wrongly convicted of killing their children.
Professor Fleming identified that in both of these cases, and others, all of the information needed to explain what had happened was obtained within three months of the deaths of their children, but it needed a multi-agency perspective to understand the significance of the information held. Following this it was identified that there was a need to review the deaths of all children to identify what can be learned, to improve the lives of young people and their families and to ensure that no further miscarriages of justice occurred.