Tiffany Tompkins of Buffalo lost her two-month-old daughter Sia to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS, earlier in early October.

"I miss her so much, like I love her, that's my first daughter,” Tompkins said. “It was beyond shocking."

Tompkins said she woke with Sia sleeping next to her on her side, unresponsive with blue lips and foam around her nose.

"It hurts me for her life to be cut so short. I got to comb her hair, I got to put bows in her hair,” Tompkins said. “Her smile, her dimples. Like she was smart, she was moving around a lot. She was growing really good."

Leaders with the P3 Center, part of the Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center, work with pregnant women and new moms until the child turns two.

They also provide support to those like Tompkins who've lost a child to SIDS or have suffered a miscarriage.

"SIDS is one of the taboo topics and so we don't necessarily get a lot of people coming here just for support after the loss of their child,” said Karen Vilardo, the maternal and infant health initiative coordinator at Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center. ”A lot of times the moms blame themselves, and then they think it's their fault, when it's not necessarily their fault."

Vilardo says the Center educates moms on prevention topics like going tobacco free and providing safe sleep environments.

Counselors are also available for those with nowhere else to turn.

"We would love to have more people come in and have a conversation to get additional support because it is one of those things where someone experiencing it, they just feel alone and they don't know what to do," Vilardo said.

Over the weekend, Tompkins hosted a memorial prayer service and balloon launch for her daughter.

All in an effort to bring more awareness to the issue.