Fathers have mixed, conflicting, helpless, regretful feelings and unique needs during PTFCA. It is crucial that healthcare professionals understand these experiences and needs to provide family-centered, father-inclusive care. Health professionals need to understand the experiences of fathers and learn to be sensitive and empathetic and to keep the communication lines open to create and maintain a compassionate and caring environment. Suitable interventions may then be developed so that fathers do not feel ignored or marginalized and may experience a smoother transition to fatherhood in the face of perinatal death. Achieving this scenario is expected to benefit the fathers themselves as well as to improve their relationships with and the outcomes for their partners and families.