NACPM State Chapter Day May 20, 2018

On May 10th before the start of the CPM Symposium, NACPM hosted the first-ever in-person gathering of NACPM chapter members. We were thrilled to have had representation from 13 of our 18 currently formed state chapters at this seminal event plus guests from 4 additional states. This day was designed specifically for chapter leaders and members with the hope of sending them back to their states with information, skills, tools and connections to put to work for their unique state priorities.

NACPM hopes to build on the conversations and connections that began during the Chapter Day through our quarterly chapter collaboration calls, one of which was earlier this week. We had a total of 30 participants over the course of the call and heard from everyone who wished to share about what’s going on in their state and what they are bringing back to their state and local work from our time together at the Chapter Day.

Overview of the Chapter Day

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We opened our day together in a circle sharing what question we were bringing. The questions centered around the themes of access and equity, inclusion, unity, and accountability, relationships between NACPM national and Chapters and between Chapters and state associations, and how to bring about broader systemic change:

Access and equity: How do we strategically plan to help POC access midwives? Are we working at our own bigotry and racism?

Inclusion, unity, and accountability: How can we overcome divisions in our midwifery profession? How are we going to ensure communications are in place to learn from our mistakes?

Relationships between NACPM national and Chapters, Chapters and state associations: How can Chapters and state associations work together? How can NACPM support licensed states? Unlicensed states?

Bringing broader systemic change: How does this fit with transformation of our maternity care system overall? How can we support what is coming up?

Chapter Day Presentations

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Facilitator Cari Caldwell presented on “Building effective state teams.” Cari shared with us about how to create high performing teams, including asking important questions like why does the team exist? Is there trust within our team? What are our goals? What is our level of commitment? She encouraged us to focus not just on the work we’re doing, but also on how we are building what we’re building. She taught us that it is crucial to get really explicit about the kind of culture we’re creating together and to construct mechanisms for accountability within our organizations.

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Saraswathi Vedam from the Birth Place Lab gave a presentation called “Mapping Integration of Midwives Across the United States: Impact on Access, Equity, and Outcomes” in which she described the background and approach of the research behind the work being done at the Birth Place Lab around the importance of integrating midwives into the maternity care system in order to improve perinatal outcomes. She emphasized that understanding the credibility of this research is the basis from which we can bring this information back to our local communities and that the lens for all of their research is ACCESS for families to care, not convenience for midwives.

She reported on the clear correlation between increasing integration of midwives, density of midwives, and access to midwifery care and a decrease in preterm birth and neonatal death. States with a higher population of black babies have poor integration, low density of midwives, and lack of access to care, compounding the unconscionable disparities in outcomes across racial lines with an added layer of risk due to lack of access to the Midwifery Model of Care which we know improves these outcomes. Saras and her team’s research shows how dire the need is to scale up midwifery in the US, where access to midwifery care is significantly lower at around 10% than in other high-resource countries, which typically have 50-75% of births attended by midwives.

This session was packed full of high value, evidence based research and was designed as preparation for the last session of the day in which we applied the State Mapping Tool to our individual state contexts through review of our state report cards, which can be found on the Birth Place Lab website.

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Silke Akerson from the Oregon Midwifery Council presented on “Tackling Quality of Care Issues at the State Level / The Oregon Experience” in which she described quality improvement measures taken in Oregon and how these improvements might be applied in other states. Silke defined quality improvement as the “combined and ongoing efforts of a group of people to understand problems and make changes that will lead to better outcomes in a particular system.” She noted that with quality improvement there is a focus on looking at problems and solutions within the system rather than placing specific blame. She taught us about how quality improvement MUST begin with cultural humility and co-creation with the communities they impact.

Some of the specific quality improvement steps that they have taken in Oregon include improving data collection, transport improvement, targeted continuing education, mentorship for new midwives, guidelines for peer review and case review, and midwife participation in public health efforts. Having taken these measures, the perinatal mortality rate of intended community births in Oregon was reduced from 3.9/1,000 in 2012-2013 to 1.005/1,000 in 2015-2016.

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Kathryn Moore, Director of State Government Affairs at ACOG shared ACOG’s perspective on CPM State Licensure and Policy and spoke to ACOG’s involvement with the US MERA collaboration.

In addition to reviewing ACOG’s statements and positions on out-of-hospital birth, Kathryn described for us the membership and governing structure of ACOG, how ACOG sets policy nationally, the leeway state ACOG groups have to set their own agenda, priorities and tactics, and the influence state medical societies have on ACOG on the state level.

She pointed to a few examples where ACOG and CPMs collaborated on legislation, including Maine with its year-long professionally facilitated negotiation among stakeholders, Maryland which underwent a collaborative process before the bridge certificate was available, and Florida’s recent legislation on adverse incident reporting.

Chapter Day Evaluation Results:

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We largely received very positive feedback from the Chapter Day evaluation that went out after the event. Participants reported that the content was of high value to them, that they made important connections, and that they would eagerly attend future in-person chapter events. We also received some great suggestions including ideas for affinity groups that could take place before a future Chapter Day, such as an opportunity for people of color or states at similar states/chapters at similar stages of development to meet and strategize.   There were requests for focus on how to get state legislation passed, how to hire a lobbyist, what to do and not do as a grassroots movement, and also ways to collaborate with the NACPM national office for states with existing regulation. Many shared that they would have appreciated more time to network and connect with one another, which is a wonderful testament to the richness of our growing community and the need for more of these gatherings.

READ THE FULL NEWSLETTER HERE

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.

FIND DETAILS ABOUT SUBMITTING VIDEO VIGNETTES HERE

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.

READ MORE AND FILL OUT THE SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION

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.

READ MORE ABOUT THE PROGRAM AND REGISTER!

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

READ MORE IN OUR NEWSLETTER

February 2018 Chapter Newsletter

Washington State – Midwives’ Lobby Day 2018

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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.

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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.

READ ON FOR MORE CHAPTER UPDATES HERE