MILWAUKEE â A national program aimed at making sure more pregnancies result in healthy babies is now in Wisconsin.
The program is called Count the Kicks. Itâs based on research that shows nearly 30% of stillbirths can be prevented when expectant parents are educated on the importance of tracking their babyâs movements daily during the third trimester.
Melissa Ziegler, a Milwaukee area mom, is an ambassador of the program. She helped make sure Count the Kicks is available to everyone in Wisconsin.
âWe were involved in some phone calls with some representatives in the state,â Ziegler said. âWe focused on awareness, advocacy and going to different [obstetrician] offices and trying to talk to the providers about it.â
Wisconsinâs Department of Health Services listened and is making sure maternal health providers, birthing hospitals, social service agencies and childbirth educators throughout the state are sharing information on Count the Kicks with expectant moms. The Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield Foundation also helped make this program possible.
Now, anyone can download the Count the Kicks app for free.
Accomplishing this was personal for Ziegler, who lost her second child at 38 weeks of pregnancy.
âWith my second pregnancy, I had a completely normal, uncomplicated pregnancy,â she said. âThen at 38 weeks, a week before my scheduled C-section, I noticed she wasnât moving as much.â
Ziegler called her doctor, who told her to come in for a checkup.
âI went into the hospital, and they did an ultrasound and couldnât find her heartbeat, and they tried again and still didnât find it,â she said. âWe learned my daughter was stillborn at 38 weeks. We named her Lillian, or Lily for short, and I just remember feeling so blindsided. Nobody had talked to me about kick counting or stillbirth.â
To honor Lily, Ziegler started advocating for Count the Kicks.
The app helped Ziegler have a better outcome during her next pregnancy. Starting at 28 weeks, she used Count the Kicks to track the babyâs movements every day.
âRight around 35 weeks, when I didnât feel her as much as normal, I went to the hospital,â Ziegler said. âShe was okay, but my blood pressure was elevated and she was born at 36 weeks.â
Though born a month early, Zieglerâs daughter Zoey was born healthy.
Kimberly Isburg, communications manager with Count the Kicks, said raising awareness is key.
âEvery year in the state of Wisconsin, according to the CDC, an average of 325 babies are stillbirth,â Isburg said.
Isburg wants everyone to know that tracking movements during the third trimester increases the odds of having a healthy outcome.
âAs baby movement changes, either an increase or decrease in movement, both mom and baby should be checked out by a health provider right away,â she said.
Ziegler said baby Zoey is an example that Count the Kicks works.
âIt was a no-brainer to me that this is something minimally invasive, and really low cost, that we could do to try and prevent stillbirth, and prevent any other family having to go through what we went through with losing Lily,â she said.
The Count the Kicks app can be found in the Apple App Store and Google Play. It is available in 16 different languages.