By-Laws Approved, New Board Member Welcomed
We are pleased to announce that the NACPM By-Laws were amended by vote of the membership, and Keisha Goode, PhD, will become the first-ever public member of the NACPM board.
Recording and CEUs Available: State Licensure for CPMs Webinar
You can now access a recording of the first webinar in the State Legislation and Policy series:
An Overview of State Licensure for CPMs
Obtain CEUs
Viewing webinar recording is FREE, and 1.5 CEU’s are available at $15.
The State Legislation and Policy Webinar Series, co-sponsored by Citizens for Midwifery (CfM) and the Association of Midwifery Educators (AME), will provide key information to CPMs, advocates, and policy makers as we work together to secure licensing and policy in support of full scope autonomous midwifery for CPMs in all 50 states.
An Overview of State Licensing for CPMs: Webinar
Please join us for the first webinar in the State Legislation and Policy series:
An Overview of State Licensure for CPMs
Thursday April 9, 2-3:30 PM, Eastern Time
Register Now
Participation in the webinar series is FREE, and 1.5 CEU’s are available at $15.
CEU Link: An Overview of State Licensing for CPMs
The State Legislation and Policy Webinar Series, co-sponsored by Citizens for Midwifery (CfM) and the Association of Midwifery Educators (AME), will provide key information to CPMs, advocates, and policy makers as we work together to secure licensing and policy in support of full scope autonomous midwifery for CPMs in all 50 states.
Recording and Q&A Available from Physiologic Birth Webinar
You can now access multiple resources from the recent webinar in the CPM Practice and Association News series, Promoting Healthy Physiologic Birth in the U.S.
Visit the webinar page to access:
A recording of the webinar
Dr. Buckley’s responses to audience questions
PowerPoint presentations
Links to additional resources
Improving Home to Hospital Transfer
Next Webinar:
Improving Home to Hospital Transfer
December 18, 2014 2:00-3:30 pm
Come hear about the Best Practice Guidelines: Transfer from Planned Home Birth to Hospital from the Home Birth Summit Collaboration Work Group and how they can support practice and care in your own community. Hear from regional perinatal collaboratives around the country, and the perspectives of the various provider groups, from midwives to receiving physicians to emergency medical personnel, on improving care for women across providers and birth settings. (1.5 MEAC CEUs applied for)
This is the first webinar in the on-going series:
CPM Practice and Association News
DETAILS IN THE FULL E-NEWSLETTER
CPM Practice and Association News Webinar Series
NACPM is excited to share news with you about our upcoming webinar offerings in the on-going series:
CPM Practice and Association News
Next webinar:
Improving Home to Hospital Transfer
December 18, 2014 2:00-3:30 pm
DETAILS IN THE FULL E-NEWSLETTER
Updates on Webinars and Annual Meeting
Due to evolving arrangements with speakers, the 2nd NACPM webinar in the series, CPM Practice and Association News – Improving Home to Hospital Transfer – will not take place on December 4th as originally announced. This webinar will still take place later in December. A recording of the Virtual Annual Meeting is now available!
Home Birth Summit Live Streaming Opportunity
NACPM is pleased to let you know that his year, one of the key sessions of the Home Birth Summit - The Ethics of Home Birth & Informed Decision-Making - will be made available for live streaming for those not attending in-person. This session will be of interest to anyone who is engaged with the maternal health care system.
Strengthening Midwifery Worldwide
In an exciting milestone this year, NACPM had the honor of being accepted as a member of the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), aligning with the 116 midwifery associations from 102 countries that make up the ICM. Our first experience as a member of the ICM came in June as NACPM joined the ICM Council Meeting and Triennial Congress in Prague in the Czech Republic.
Supporting CPM Reimbursement
Childbearing women should be able to access CPM care and have their medical insurance pay for it. NACPM is advocating for CPM Reimbursement through outreach to Federal Agencies, a webinar on section 2706 of the Affordable Care Act, and the MAMA Campaign. Read about it in our latest newsletter and get involved today!
DETAILS IN THE FULL E-NEWSLETTER
Wondering about the “Harkin Amendment”? Join NACPM July 24!
Join NACPM – and our webinar series partner, The Association of Midwifery Educators (AME) -
for the next webinar in the Affordable Care Act webinar series:
Section 2706 and Other ACA Provisions That Address Integrative Providers
on Thursday, July 24, 2PM-3:30PM Eastern
The Affordable Care Act #2: Birth Centers and Women’s Health Provisions
Join NACPM – and our webinar series partner, The Association of Midwifery Educators (AME) – for the second webinar in the Affordable Care Act webinar series:
The Affordable Care Act:
Birth Centers and Women’s Health Provisions
on Thursday, June 26, 2PM-3:30PM Eastern
Mark Your Calendars: Two Exciting ACA Webinars in July!
Join NACPM – and our webinar series partner, The Association of Midwifery Educators (AME) – for the next webinars in the Affordable Care Act webinar series:
Understanding Accountable Care Organizations
on Thursday, July 10, 2PM-3:30PM Eastern
and
Section 2706 and Other ACA Provisions That Address Integrative Providers
on Thursday, July 24, 2PM-3:30PM Eastern
New Website! Webinars and CEUs!
Today NACPM launches a completely new website, designed to better serve our members and provide more information to others interested in midwifery and our work. Whether it’s the latest news from the MAMA campaign for federal recognition of CPMs or the schedule for our webinar series on health care reform, you’ll be able to find it all in one central location. We are also thrilled to announce the first webinar, scheduled for May 22, 2014, at 2 PM, Eastern time. Please join NACPM and presenter Becky Martin for the first webinar in NACPM’s Affordable Care Act webinar series.
Exciting News from the United States Midwifery Education, Regulation and Association Workgroup
On behalf of the NACPM Board of Directors, we are excited to share news with you from the United States Midwifery Education, Regulation and Association (US MERA) Workgroup!
In addition to NACPM, this Workgroup includes the Accreditation Commission for Midwifery Education (ACME), American College of Nurse Midwives (ACNM), American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB), Midwifery Education Accreditation Council (MEAC), Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA), and North American Registry of Midwives (NARM).
Last weekend marked our second annual facilitated in-person meeting outside of Washington, D.C. There we reached an historic milestone, agreeing to work together on several critical action steps to ensure the future of midwifery in the United States.
Please read our joint statement, “2014 US MERA Meeting: A Summary Report”
Propelled by the needs of childbearing women around the country, representatives of each of the seven organizations have worked together for almost three years to find essential common ground. We strive to expand and ensure all women’s access to normal physiologic birth in all birth settings and to high-quality maternity care and the care of midwives. We are directed and inspired by the International Confederation of Midwives’ (ICM) vision of a strong and autonomous midwifery workforce around the globe, and by the support of ICM’s Global Standards for Education, Regulation and Association to achieve this vision.
To support the rapid development of a robust, diverse and accessible midwifery workforce in the U.S. to meet the needs of women, we have engaged with each other in challenging conversations and recognized the need for some changes in the positions of all of our organizations. We also all remained true to our core values and committed to building on our strengths.
We recognized several urgent and critical needs:
licensing for all nationally certified midwives in all 50 states
the ability to practice to the full extent of our training and experience
the need to promote innovation and accessibility in midwifery education through multiple pathways
the necessity of integrating midwifery care seamlessly into the U.S. health care system
We acknowledged the value and role of accreditation by agencies recognized by the U.S. Department of Education (MEAC and ACME) in the development of, and the ability to scale up, direct-assessment, competency-based midwifery training programs that will build on the innovations and affordability of the Portfolio Evaluation Process pathway.
Of great importance, we committed to continued collaboration and to engaging our members and stakeholders in further development and clarification of the paths forward to achieve licensure for nationally credentialed midwives in all 50 states and to innovate to expand access to affordable accredited education for all midwives. We are committed to the time it will take to operationalize these goals, and to communicate what it will take to achieve them. We welcome your questions and concerns as we develop an FAQ, with regular updates, to include you in this process. Please write to us at executivedirector@nacpm.org
We are excited by the commitment of U.S. midwifery leadership to doing the hard work of resolving issues that have stood in the way of advancing midwifery in the U.S. for far too long. We are counting on you to inform us with your questions and concerns as we stretch for new and creative solutions to meeting the needs of midwives and women in the U.S.
With great faith and hope,
Mary Lawlor, CPM
Executive Director, NACPM
Ellie Daniels, CPM
President, NACPM
NACPM Joins the International Confederation of Midwives!
Congratulations CPMs! The National Association of Certified Professional Midwives has been accepted as a member in the International Confederation of Midwives! NACPM for the first time will send 2 delegates and 2 observers to the ICM governing Council meeting, as well as to the 30th Triennial Congress in Prague this June 2014.
Towards Eliminating Disparities and Eradicating Racism
In a recent NACPM survey of members, over 90% of respondents included eliminating perinatal disparities and eradicating racism in midwifery as important priorities for NACPM. NACPM is committed to advancing these priorities . Now comes an important opportunity to join with others from around our country and the world to examine challenging concepts of privilege and oppression and to find solutions and identify strategies to work toward a more equitable world.
Please join NACPM in supporting and attending the 15th White Privilege Conference: Building Relationships! Strengthening Communities! Seeking Justice! on March 26-29 in Madison, Wisconsin. Follow the lead of the Wisconsin NACPM Pilot Chapter in promoting social justice in the midwifery profession and reducing health inequities for childbearing women. Read below for opportunities to support and participate.
In recognition of Black History Month in February, NACPM honors the foundational role that African American midwives have played and continue to play in the lives and health of women and babies in the U.S. NACPM honors the role of community leaders around the country for their unflagging leadership in the critical effort to eliminate birth disparities. Please read below for a small sampling of their work. Take a look at Claudia Booker’s Black History Midwife Calendar for a beautiful tribute to many of these national leaders.
With all best wishes,
Mary Lawlor, CPM
Executive Director, NACPM
Join NACPM at the White Privilege Conference
The 15th White Privilege Conference: Building Relationships! Strengthening Communities! Seeking Justice! brings together 1500 people annually for a comprehensive look at issues of privilege including: race, gender, sexuality, class, disability, etc. – the ways we all experience some form of privilege, and how we’re all affected by that privilege.
Participants will include high school and college students, teachers, university faculty and higher education professionals, nonprofit staff, activists, social workers and counselors, healthcare workers, and members of the spiritual community and corporate arena. We are excited to have the opportunity to examine the stubborn problems of equity and disparities in maternity care through this lens, and in the company of others who are thinking about privilege in this country as it impacts education, health care, business and more!
NACPM is a sponsor of the White Privilege Conference and will send three NACPM board members and staff to this important gathering. We encourage CPMs throughout the country to join us in supporting and attending this event – we look forward to seeing you there!
Wisconsin NACPM Chapter Leads the Way to the White Privilege Conference
The Wisconsin NACPM Chapter and the Wisconsin Guild of Midwives are working to promote racial justice in the midwifery profession and reduce health inequities for childbearing women. They are excited that the White Privilege Conference is being held in Madison, Wisconsin – their very own state. To further their racial justice work, together they are co-sponsoring the conference at the $1000 level, sending representatives to this event, and raising money for students to attend.
Wisconsin challenges your NACPM Chapter and/or state midwifery organization to join them in supporting the conference:
Become a supporter
Register for the conference!
Donate for a student to attend. Send a check in any amount, with “WPC/NACPM donation” in the memo line, to:
Tehmina Islam
46 North Lakewood Gardens Lane
Madison, WI 53704
Black History Month
Friday, February 28th, was the last day of the 2014 Black History Month. With roots dating back to 1926, Black History Month is an annual observance in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom for remembering important people and events in the history of the African Diaspora.
In one of many national tributes to midwives during Black History Month, Claudia Booker shared the story of South Carolina nurse midwife, Maude Callen. In 1951, LIFE Magazine published a stunning photo essay of Maude Callen’s life as she delivered babies and educated midwifery students in a 400-mile area crippled by poverty in the 1950s and “veined with muddy roads.” We urge you to view this beautiful photo tribute.
Midwife of Color Initiatives to Eliminate Birth Outcome Disparities
The following are a small sampling of efforts around the nation led by midwives of color. NACPM will feature additional initiatives in future newsletters.
The JJ Way©: Toward Eliminating Disparities
In her blog , Jennie Joseph, CPM, reminds us of “the foundational role that African American midwives played in the provision of maternity care for both Black and White women from slavery on upwards.” The overarching goal of Jennie’s model of maternity health care “is to see that every woman has an opportunity for the healthiest possible pregnancy, birth and postpartum, regardless of the color of her skin or her socio-economic status; a model where babies, mommies, families and communities thrive because the emphasis is on access, connections, knowledge and empowerment – quality care for every woman, every time.”
NABCC: Eliminating Disparities through Birth Centers of Color
The National Association of Birth Centers of Color (NABCC) was founded in February 2012 by a group of CPMs committed to serving all women, but particularly women of color, through community-based maternity clinic and birth center services. With a vision to eliminate racial disparities in birth outcomes,each founding midwife member has experience working with women of color through her own clinic and/or birth center, and has achieved better health and better care within her population through culturally-competent, evidence-based, comprehensive and cost-efficient midwifery and maternity-care home models.
NACPM is a supporter of NABCC. We urge you to become a member and support the critical work of this organization.
ICTC Leads the Way: Reimbursing Doulas to Reduce Disparities
Thanks in good part to the leadership of Shafia Monroe and the Center for Traditional Childbearing (ICTC), the Oregon legislature passed a law in 2011 requiring the Oregon Health Authority to investigate how doulas and other community health workers can improve the birth outcomes of underprivileged and underserved women. After a further two-year process with the Oregon Health Authority and the legislature, ICTC recently announced a stunning victory: certified doula services are now reimbursed by Medicaid!
ICTC is an approved Oregon Health Authority training organization. ICTC’s Full Circle Doula Training Program builds on a tradition and history of midwifery practice in the African American community and has trained over 400 doulas of color since 1991. One-third of those trained have continued on to become midwives. Congratulations and many thanks to ICTC and the doulas and childbearing women of Oregon on achieving Medicaid reimbursement for doulas!
NACPM supports ICTC and we urge you to do so as well!
Birth Workers of Color Grand Challenge: Critical Need to Educate Midwives of Color
Spearheaded by Vicki Penwell, CPM, Claudia Booker, CPM, and Jennie Joseph, CPM, the Scholarship Solution and Grand Challenge from Mercy in Actionis a challenge to schools and other birth worker training programs to each offer a scholarship to a woman of color every year. A data base of scholarship and support opportunities for students will be collected and shared with aspiring students of color. Read how you can support and participate.
Please join NACPM in our ongoing work to advocate for quality improvements in national maternity care.
Form a pilot chapter in your state and enhance CPMs’ national influence to improve the maternity care system in the U.S. for all women, and promote, protect and defend the profession. Learn more from our website, and contact our Administrative Assistant for further information and help getting started. Also feel free to download and print the Pilot Project description and policy.
Join or renew your membership, if you haven’t already; invite others to join; and like us on Facebook today to help spread the word.
Sincerely,
Mary Lawlor, CPM
Executive Director, NACPM
Ellie Daniels, CPM
President, NACPM
Homebirth is Alive and Well: Evidence and Resources for Women and Providers
NACPM Steps Up to Advocacy for Quality Improvement
Letter From Executive Director
Greetings!
NACPM is actively collaborating with other maternity care professionals and stakeholders to influence critical national policy. Together we are working to improve the quality of maternity care services for all women, bringing the valuable skills and perspectives of CPMs to a number of national policy tables.
Please read below for news of NACPM’s recent opportunities, as a founding member of the Coalition for Quality Maternity Care, to influence Federal agencies on behalf of better care and more consumer choice for childbearing women. See how your professional organization is stepping up to quality improvement in maternity care through our long-standing membership in the National Quality Forum (NQF), and read about our new representative to the NQF, Autumn Vergo, CPM.
Autumn will be traveling to Washington, D.C. this week on behalf of NACPM to participate in the NQF’s 2014 Annual Conference, “Making Sense of Quality Data for Patients, Providers, and Payers.” Watch for a report of the conference and its relevance to CPMs and the mission of NACPM on her return.
And be sure to check out the opportunity for building your quality improvement skills!
Sincerely,
Mary Lawlor, Executive Director National Association of Certified Professional Midwives
NACPM Appoints New Representative to the NQF
NACPM is pleased to announce that Autumn Vergo, CPM from New Hampshire and NACPM board member, has accepted the appointment as NACPM’s representative to the National Quality Forum.
Autumn Vergo
Autumn’s interest in quality improvement developed over several years’ service as a member of northern New England’s regional, multi-hospital quality improvement network. She has worked alongside pediatricians, obstetrician/gynecologists, midwives and nurses on several projects intended to improve communication between hospital-based providers and community midwives, and serves as a case reviewer on her region’s Confidential Review and Improvement Board. Her cross-training as both a Certified Professional Midwife and a Registered Nurse help her to bridge the gap between care models and effectively represent the midwifery community on issues of best practice, safety, and quality improvement.
The National Quality Forum (NQF) is a non-profit organization that promotes quality and change in the health care system through development and implementation of a national strategy for health care quality measurement and reporting. NQF membership includes a wide variety of healthcare stakeholders, including consumer organizations, public and private purchasers, physicians, nurses, hospitals, accrediting and certifying bodies, supporting industries, and healthcare research and quality improvement organizations – and midwives: NACPM has been a member of NQF since 2008, reflecting NACPM’s commitment to improving the quality of care for all women.
Autumn will represent NACPM at NQF’s 2014 Annual Conference, “Making Sense of Quality Data for Patients, Providers, and Payers” in Washington, D.C. this month. The NQF annual conference brings together more than 400 healthcare professionals, quality experts, and member organization executives and staff from across the United States, all of whom are dedicated to driving quality improvement within our healthcare system.
A Victory for Women and Families: Reporting on Perinatal Core Measures Becomes Mandatory
Beginning this month, mothers and families will be able to see and compare how hospitals care for women and their infants, including their primary cesarean section, elective delivery and breastfeeding rates.
The Joint Commission, a nonprofit organization that accredits more than 20,000 health care organizations and programs in the U.S., has decided to require mandatory reporting for hospitals with more than 1100 births a year, on 5 of the 17 childbirth-related performance measures developed by the National Quality Forum. In 2013, this reporting was voluntary, with only 160 of the nation’s thousands of hospitals participating. Now with the new mandatory reporting requirement for accredited hospitals, consumers will have access to important information from hospitals around the country at www.qualitycheck.org and be able to make better informed decisions about choosing care providers.
“With more than four million births in the United States each year, perinatal measures are needed to ensure the health and well-being of new mothers and newborns,” said Janet Corrigan, PhD, MBA, president and CEO of NQF in announcing its endorsement in 2012. “This set of measures will help promote the type of high-quality care these populations deserve.”
As a member of NQF, NACPM provided comments to the organization during the development of perinatal quality measures that were approved for endorsement in April 2012. These measures address a wide range of care concerns, including childbirth, pregnancy and post-partum care, and newborn care.
It is anticipated that mandatory reporting will eventually lead to lower cesarean sections, fewer elective deliveries, higher breastfeeding rates and other care improvements for mothers and infants.
NACPM Joins National Conversation to Improve Medicaid Coverage for Pregnant Women and Children
NACPM is a founding member organization of the Coalition for Quality Maternal Care (CQMC), a partnership of national professional, consumer, and human rights organizations that have come together to champion the urgent need for national strategies to ensure access to affordable, high quality maternity care for all women and infants.
On January 6, NACPM signed a letter sent by the ACNM on behalf of CQMC members to the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC) providing specific recommendations regarding issues related to maternity care. MACPAC is a non-partisan, federal agency charged with providing policy and data analysis to the Congress on Medicaid and CHIP, and for making recommendations to the Congress and the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the states on a wide range of issues affecting those programs. The goal of the CQMC was to foster continued focus on maternity care by MACPAC as much of its previous work has centered on other aspects of coverage under Medicaid.
MACPAC responded to the CQMC letter, indicating that the recommendations had been circulated to commissioners and appropriate staff. The Commission has included a chapter providing general information on Medicaid’s maternity care in one of its previous reports and plans to include recommendations regarding maternity care in a forthcoming report, focused on the complexities around Medicaid coverage for pregnant women.
New This Year:
Quality Rating System
to Inform Pregnant Women
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is implementing a requirement of the Affordable Care Act to develop a Quality Rating System (QRS) to assist consumers as they make decisions regarding their health plans. As part of this process, CMS is soliciting comments on a list of proposed quality measures that Qualified Health Plan issuers would be required to collect and report on.
NACPM has joined the CQMC in a submitting a letter expressing appreciation to CMS for identifying maternity care as an area which merits distinct measurement. To date, CMS has proposed including only one measure, out of a total of 42, that rates two factors related to maternity care. Given the place of maternity care within the health system in terms of both number of procedures and cost, CQMC believes that two measures are insufficient, stating, “We believe that this group of women and their partners will be very interested in information regarding the quality of maternity care provided through the plans available to them.”
The coalition recommends three priority measures (exclusive breastfeeding; cesarean section rate for low-risk women; timeliness of prenatal & postnatal care) and four additional measures for consideration in the development of the Quality Rating System.
In addition the coalition recommends to CMS, “because women may choose to obtain care from a variety of provider types (e.g., OB/GYNs, Family Practice physicians, Certified Nurse Midwives/Certified Midwives, Certified Professional Midwives), and in different settings (e.g., hospitals, birth centers and residences) it would be helpful if…plans report this data broken down by provider type and place of service. Consumers would thus have access to more specific and useful information to guide them in their enrollment choices.“
Join Virtual Community for Quality Improvement Skills
NACPM has recently learned that Diana Jolles, CNM, MS, the ACNM Quality Section Chair has a plan to deliver quality improvement skills to the midwife community in the United States through the Institute for Healthcare Improvement.
Jolles, a professor at Frontier Nursing University in Kentucky, is creating a virtual community for students, faculty, and practicing midwives. All midwives, Jolles says, are welcome to join the group, which will learn from the IHI Open School courses throughout 2014.
Jolles sees big challenges – and big opportunities – in the field of quality and safety in the midwife community. This virtual community will include monthly webinars to complement learning from the Open School courses. The first webinar “Increasing Midwifery-led Quality Improvement Capability” has already taken place. Webinars still to be offered include:
“Quality Improvement and Perinatal Safety,” on February 6
“Midwifery Leadership and Quality Improvement,” on March 6
“Person- and Family-Centered Care Midwifery-led Quality Improvement Programs,” on April 7
Email Diana to learn more about the midwife community she is launching.
Please join NACPM in our ongoing work to advocate for quality improvements in national maternity care.
Join or renew your membership, if you haven’t already; invite others to join; and like us on Facebook today to help spread the word.
Sincerely,
Mary Lawlor, Executive Director
Ellie Daniels, President
