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SAMJ: South African Medical Journal
versão On-line ISSN 2078-5135versão impressa ISSN 0256-9574
Resumo
BHAMJEE, S; BIYELA, S e MARAIS, A. Criminalising compassion: Why Baby Saver Boxes must be protected, not punished. SAMJ, S. Afr. med. j. [online]. 2026, vol.116, n.2, pp.17-19. ISSN 2078-5135. https://doi.org/10.7196/SAMJ.2026.v116i2.4482.
South Africa (SA) faces a silent crisis of infant abandonment, often in unsafe environments, driven by poverty, stigma and limited access to abortion. Baby Saver Boxes - secure, monitored drop-off points - offer a humane alternative aligned with constitutional imperatives of life, dignity, healthcare and the best interests of the child. However, proposed amendments to the Children's Act risk criminalising compassion, reframing safe relinquishment as abandonment and undermining harm-reduction strategies. This punitive approach causes increased cases of neonaticide and maternal desperation, deters healthcare engagement, and places healthcare professionals in ethically fraught positions. Evidence from global best practice - including Germany's Babyklappe and US safe haven laws - demonstrates that legal recognition of safe relinquishment reduces mortality and promotes maternal health. A rights-based approach, informed by trauma-sensitive policy and intersectoral collaboration, is essential to protect vulnerable mothers and infants. SA must choose compassion over control, integrating Baby Saver Boxes into public health systems to uphold human rights and prevent avoidable deaths.
Palavras-chave : Baby Saver Boxes; safe relinquishment; abandonment; constitutional imperatives; harm-reduction strategies; neonaticide; maternal desperation; healthcare professionals' ethical burden; global best practice (Babyklappe, safe haven laws); trauma-informed policy; rights-based approach; intersectoral collaboration.












