Call for NACPM Board Nominations!

NACPM is in an exciting time of transition and expansion. We are reimagining our future, assessing what has worked for us and learning about ways that we can be more supportive to the CPM community. We are building a board that will identify the next  steps in our strategic approach and our new Executive leadership. Serving on the NACPM board is exciting and rewarding work, providing opportunities to contribute to the profession and to develop leadership skills.

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NACPM’s National Search Advocate process

The Executive Director of NACPM leads the association towards achieving its vision, purpose, values and commitments. The Executive Director is responsible for the overall management of NACPM including all personnel, operations, financial management, strategic planning, project development, marketing, and fundraising efforts of the organization, to support and implement the mission. Additionally, the Executive Director holds primary responsibility for developing and maintaining collaborative relationships with stakeholders, and serving as a policy advocate for the integration of CPMs in the maternity care system.

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APPLY NOW: New Learning Series on Midwifery Business Case Development in Medicaid

The Institute for Medicaid Innovation (IMI) has launched a national learning series addressing the essential elements of midwifery business case development to provide services to Medicaid enrollees. The project utilizes an interactive virtual, salon-style format, bringing together Black, Indigenous, and other people of color (BIPOC) focused, Medicaid-serving midwives and midwifery practices with national experts in business development, Medicaid, and midwifery.

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Kentucky HB54 - An Act relating to Medicaid Coverage for LCPMs in Kentucky

On January 2, 2023, State Representative Russell Webber (R- Shepherdsville) and State Representative Nima Kulkarni (D- Louisville) filed HB 54 An Act relating to Medicaid coverage for certified professional midwifery services. Rep. Kulkarni has filed similar legislation the past two years. Rep. Webber carried the original 2019 bill to license Certified Professional Midwives in the House where it passed 96-1.

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The Institute for Medicaid Innovation and Every Mother Counts offer webinar Learning Series: Doula and Perinatal Community Health Workers in Medicaid Session

Session #1: High-Value, Equitable, & Evidence-Based Community-Based Perinatal Support - This session proved an overview of community-based perinatal support models, defines community based doulas and perinatal community health workers, and shares the evidence base for these models. The session provides information on the importance of community-based perinatal support in advancing birth equity.

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Smooth Transitions: Enhancing Interprofessional Collaboration when Planned Community Births Transfer to Hospital Care

Smooth Transitions is an example of a successful midwifery-led collaborative QI program designed to enhance the patient and caregiver experience by improving the process of hospital transfers from planned community-based births. Multiple stakeholders in Washington state are taking steps to promote respectful and efficient transfers and are working collaboratively to improve and grow the program. Data collection on the program's impacts is improving and ongoing, with a goal of publishing these results. By addressing community-to-hospital transfers as a multisystem issue, replication of the Smooth Transitions QI Program across the nation could promote increased community midwifery integration, thus enhancing the transfer experience for all involved.

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Statement from NARM regarding access to Neonatal Resuscitation Program Courses

Today the North American Registry of Midwives (NARM) announced the findings of their NRP survey. The survey was conducted in response to the challenges some CPMs have expressed trying to access NPR courses.While NARM acknowledges that difficulties do exist accessing NPR courses in some communicates, NARM maintains the importance of requiring the full NRP program (Online written exam and Skills testing) to uphold a standard of CPM skill outweighs the challenges individuals may face. NARM has committed to creating a Community-Based NRP Instructor Resource List that they will publish in the coming weeks.

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National Midwifery Institute to host - Manifestations of Racism in Midwifery Education - A talk with Hakima Tafunzi Payne, MSN, RN

This session is a safe space for Black, Brown, and Indigenous midwifery students. The discussion will center around the phenomenon of racism as it occurs in both didactic and clinical learning (including apprenticeships) during midwifery education. Students will be offered opportunities to share their stories and experiences in order to process and begin to heal from the trauma associated with midwifery education for BIPOC candidates. 

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NACPM Welcomes New Board Member : Tamara Trinidad, CPM

Tamara is a community partera/midwife, perinatal educator, and herbalist, born and raised in Puerto Rico. She is a mother of two children who were born at home with midwives and has been actively involved in birth work since 2012. She holds a Master of Science in Midwifery (MSM) with foundations in Botanical Medicine from Bastyr University and is a Certified Professional Midwife (CPM), credentialed by the North American Registry of Midwives (NARM), all completed in 2019.

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Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health (JMWH) CALL FOR MANUSCRIPTS: Contemporary Issues in Contraception and Abortion Care

The following manuscript types will be considered: Reviews, Innovations from the Field, Quality Improvement Reports, Clinical Rounds case reports, and Commentaries. Descriptions of the JMWH types of articles can be found in the Journal’s instructions for authors at www.jmwh.org. All manuscripts should include a discussion of access to care and health equity.

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Report : Nowhere to Go: Maternity Care Deserts Across the U.S.

March of Dimes released its 2022 report, Nowhere to Go: Maternity Care Deserts Across the U.S., revealing access to maternity care is diminishing in places where it's needed most, impacting nearly seven million American women of childbearing age and roughly 500,000 babies. The data reinforces that the U.S. is still among the most dangerous developed nations for childbirth, especially in rural areas and communities of color.

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