Click through for a message from the 2018 CPM Symposium Convening Partners:
Be a part of the Symposium action!
There are a number of opportunities for being a part of the Symposium; you can join in person or virtually, and don’t forget to submit your video vignette!
Changing Systems
Meet the CPM Symposium speakers who will help us understand the different forces at work in the maternity health care system from a range of varying perspectives.
Join our CPM Symposium Livestream!
If you want to participate in the CPM Symposium but can’t make it to the event, read about our livestream options in this week’s newsletter.
Meet CPM Symposium Speakers
Learn more about our CPM Symposium Speakers Claudia Booker, Allyson Juneau-Butler, Elle Annalise L. Schnetzler, Karen Jefferson and Demetra Seriki.
Best Prices for CPM Symposium Still Available!
If you’ve been meaning to register for the CPM Symposium but think you’ve missed the best prices, never fear, there is still time!
50 Speakers at the CPM Symposium!
A rich program with many speakers is planned, including Karline Wilson-Mitchel, Autumn Cavender-Wilson, Kathryn Moore, Denicia Cadena and Tamar Reno.
Share your story with the CPM Symposium!
Certified Professional Midwives (CPM) are committed to bringing the voices and perspectives of people having babies – your voices – into The CPM Symposium on May 11-13. We want to hear from you directly so that your voice and your experience can help to guide this work. With that end in mind, we invite you to make a one-minute video about your experience of having a baby and send it to the planning team for the CPM Symposium.
CPM Symposium Scholarships
NACPM and our Symposium Convening Partners (AME, CfM, ICTC) are committed to supporting a racially, ethnically, and culturally diverse midwifery workforce and providing opportunities for multiple voices to be heard so we can better understand and be responsive to the needs of all childbearing people. In service to this commitment we are offering full and partial scholarships to the 2018 CPM Symposium which are reserved for midwives, students, consumers, allied professionals and advocates who identify as people of color, native, indigenous, and/or LGBTQ2S.
Black Maternal Health Week
In this week’s newsletter we highlight next week’s inaugural Black Maternal Health Week launched by the Black Mamas Matter Alliance. Our Battling Over Birth webinar with Dr. Julia Chinyere Oparah takes place on April 11, and please read the thoughts of NACPMs newest board member Khailyla “Kiki” Jordan on joining our Leadership Team.
CPM Symposium Program announced
We are excited to announce the carefully crafted CPM Symposium program! It is focused on the priorities voiced by the CPM community: the needs of childbearing people, state and national policy, challenges and solutions to address equity in education, practice and the composition of the CPM workforce, thorny problems and encouraging innovations in education, along with one of your top priorities – viability and sustainability for the profession and the midwifery movement.
CPM Symposium – Early Bird registration deadline extended!
By popular request and in anticipation of releasing the program for the CPM Symposium soon, we are extending the Early Bird registration deadline.
CLICK THROUGH FOR THE LATEST INFORMATION ON THE CPM SYMPOSIUM
Meet the CPM Symposium Facilitators
The 2018 CPM Symposium is a two and one-half day facilitated planning event bringing together midwives, childbearing people,students, educators, policy makers, funders, allied professionals and other stakeholders to plan for the future of the CPM profession. With the support of three skilled facilitators, the convening and consulting partners will create a space for innovative collaboration. Meet the facilitators
New Webinar Announced!
Battling Over Birth: Research Justice as Framework for Transforming Maternal Health Care with Dr. Julia, Chinyere Oparah, co-author of the report Battling Over Birth.
Announcing Dr. Michael Lu as CPM Symposium Keynote Speaker
We are very excited to welcome Dr. Lu as our Keynote speaker for the CPM Symposium. Read more about how his address will inform our work.
CPM Symposium Convening and Consulting Partners
Learn about the organizations who are working together to put on the CPM Symposium, and find out who we are consulting with to help us inform the Symposium from multiple perspectives.
CPM Symposium Registration is Open!
The CPM Symposium is coming! We hope to see you in Maryland on May 11-13.
Using Data to Improve Care
This newsletter highlights how Quality Improvement examinines practice-level data to identify ways to improve care based on the data. In addition, it points to the shortcomings in data collection in the U.S. and the lack of a nationwide effort to reduce birth-related mortality.
February 2018 Chapter Newsletter
Washington State – Midwives’ Lobby Day 2018
We are excited to share this update from the MAWS lobby day in Washington State. The Washington State Chapter of NACPM was intentionally designed to function in collaboration with the established state association, MAWS, with a vision for ever-deepening partnership and mutual support. Jen Segadelli serves as a liaison between the two organizations, sitting on the board of each. This update comes from Audrey Levine, NACPM co-president and MAWS board member:
You never know what you’ll miss if you don’t show up for Midwives’ Lobby Day…
This year, we had a record turnout: more than 80 licensed midwives, midwifery students, and healthcare consumers braved the rain and showed up in Olympia on January 18th. Many of you have probably already seen the video that captured the highlight of the day–and, some might say, one of the most memorable moments in MAWS’ history. Thanks to a good deal of behind-the-scenes finagling by our fabulous lobbyist, Amber Ulvenes, we got to sit in the House gallery and witness the unanimous vote in support of HB 2016, which would give midwives and doulas access to WA State prisons to provide voluntary prenatal and postpartum care. Several legislators spoke from the floor and sang the praises of the midwives who’d been there for the births of their babies or grandbabies. Then, the Speaker Pro Tempore asked us to stand, and MAWS received a standing ovation from the entire WA State House of Representatives. It was epic.
Meanwhile, over in one of the Senate hearing rooms, MAWS President, Neva Gerke, was testifying on SB 6304, a bill that would guarantee continued funding in WA State for the CHIP program, which the federal government had threatened to de-fund. SB 6304 and its companion bill in the House, HB 2660, would not only ensure that all children in Washington would have healthcare coverage; it also would guarantee prenatal care coverage for all childbearing people in the state. Both SB 6304 and HB 2660 are moving forward in their respective chambers.
In addition to talking about these bills with members and their aides, we asked for support for an amendment to the budget proviso that passed last year, maintaining the cap on the midwifery licensing fee. Since 2009, when this fee cap went into effect, the licensed midwifery workforce in Washington has grown by 40%. Due to misinformation that we received last year from the Department of Health, the amount we’d requested from the legislature during the 2017 session was insufficient to cover the shortfall in the Midwifery Program budget at the DOH. For the most part, members were very receptive to our request that an additional $50,000 be allocated this year to fulfill on the intention of the proviso. To our surprise, Senator Fortunato (yes, that’s really his name) decided after meeting with several of his constituents, that we shouldn’t have to come back every year and ask for a budget proviso to keep our licensing fee reasonable. So, he has introduced SB 6559 which would essentially put the midwifery fee cap into statute. Although it’s unlikely that the bill will go forward this session, it is encouraging that we have some support for a more permanent fix to our licensing fee issue.
We also spent time in our meetings with legislators seeding the concept of title protection for birth centers, sharing the legislative language we have drafted to protect the terms “birth center,” “birthing center,” and “childbirth center” in statute, and conveying the thoughtful process we are engaging in with other stakeholders, including the WA State Hospital Association (WSHA). The rationale for this effort is two-fold: 1) to protect consumers – we believe that families choosing a birth center for their care should be able to know what kind of care is actually offered in such a facility and what kinds of outcomes are achieved there; and 2) to preserve the integrity of the birth center model of care. The WSHA representatives we spoke with prior to session indicated that they understand our concerns, but they asked MAWS to wait until 2019 to introduce a bill so that they could have time to educate their members about the rationale for such legislation and give hospitals an opportunity to voluntarily re-brand as necessary. We agreed to do so—and heard from quite a few legislators how much they appreciated this collaborative approach.
Sen. Fortunato, however, was highly motivated to take action this year and decided to drop SB 6579. Although it is not at all likely that the bill will get a hearing this session, according to Sen. Fortunato introducing the bill this session conveys to WSHA and their members that MAWS is serious about this effort and that we have legislative support.
Midwifery Charting and Bridge Certificate Resources
This week’s newsletter highlights our 2017 webinars on charting, a useful resource about best practices for midwives. It also includes resources on the Bridge Certificate. Also note the upcoming webinar with Dr. Melissa Cheyney on neonatal mortality, co-sponsored by NACPM and MANA.
READ THE FULL NEWSLETTER HERE