It is also difficult for doctors to deal with stillbirths. Firstly, they do not know how to explain their condition and comfort the emotional patients and families, and secondly, it is difficult to find the real cause of fetal death with the available means and to find evidence to prove their innocence. The current examination of stillbirths remains at the tissue level and partly at the cellular level, but the cause of many stillbirths is at the molecular level and the current means are too thin. Some cold numbers about stillbirths: the composition of deaths from 20 weeks of gestation to one year after birth: 24.4% from 20 to 27 weeks of gestation; 23.3% from 28 weeks to full term; 34.9% within 28 days of birth; and 17.7% from 28 days to one year of age. The incidence of stillbirths after 20 weeks of gestation in the United States in 2006 was 6.1/1000. If there is a history of stillbirth The risk of stillbirth recurring in the next pregnancy is 5 times higher if there is a history of stillbirth. A study of over 500 stillbirths in the United States found that the most common causes of stillbirth were: placental abruption, multiple births, premature rupture of membranes at 20-24 weeks, uteroplacental malperfusion, maternal vascular disease, fetal structural and chromosomal abnormalities, intrauterine infection, cord prolapse, cord stenosis, cord thrombosis, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, diabetes mellitus, and anticardiolipin antibody syndrome. This multicenter study performed an autopsy on each stillbirth, a histopathological examination of the placenta, and appropriate maternal and fetal blood/tissue examinations, including chromosomal karyotyping. Even so, in 24% of these stillbirth cases, no cause could be found. How patients and family members should treat stillbirth correctly 1. Respect the law of natural selection and natural elimination of nature: Cooperate with the doctor to conduct appropriate examinations to find the cause of stillbirth, which includes autopsy of stillbirth, histopathological examination of placenta, examination of blood/tissue, stillbirth and chromosomal examination of both parents, etc. But unfortunately, most hospitals in our country lack the means and ability to conduct systematic examination and research on the causes of stillbirths, and even if they do, the real cause may not be found. 2. Don’t blame the doctor too much: arguing with the hospital and the doctor neither helps the body to recover nor helps to solve the problem. Don’t blame the doctor for not doing cesarean section in time, it is proved that the increase of cesarean section rate is not accompanied by the decrease of stillbirth. The actual fact is that the increase in the rate of cesarean section is not accompanied by a decrease in the rate of stillbirth. 3. After the occurrence of stillbirth, doctors and family members should care more about the patient, help her recover, try to identify the cause and prepare to try for the next pregnancy. Pregnancy is a process of trial and error, and after the necessary tests and physical and psychological recovery, you don’t have to wait long to try to get pregnant again. What hospitals and doctors should do There should be more research into stillbirths and try to identify the cause so that it can be prevented from happening again in the next pregnancy.