Who are CPMs?

Screen Shot 2020-07-06 at 4.12.16 PM.png

A Certified Professional Midwife (CPM) is a knowledgeable, skilled and professional primary maternity care provider. CPMs are trained and credentialed to offer expert care, education, counseling and support to birthing people during the pregnancy, birth and the postpartum periods. CPMs practice as autonomous health professionals working within a network of relationships with other care providers who can provide consultation and collaboration when needed. All CPMs meet the standards for certification set by the North American Registry of Midwives (NARM).

 In the United States, Certified Professional Midwives provide unique and critical access to normal physiologic birth, profoundly benefitting birthing people and newborns. Although qualified to practice in any setting, they have particular training and expertise in providing care in homes and free-standing birth centers, and own or work in over half of the birth centers in the U.S. today.

Certified Professional Midwives are a fast-growing branch of the midwifery profession in the United States. The first CPM credential was issued in 1994 and 4,354 have been awarded as of December 2022.  Currently, with approximately 2600 active credentials, approximately 1 in 5 midwives in the U.S. today is a CPM. 

The CPM Credential

National certification is a mechanism by which members of the midwifery profession exercise the right and responsibility for ensuring there are standards for the core competencies necessary for safe practice and that midwives achieve and maintain the defined competencies. National certification, like educational program accreditation, is developed and administered through private agencies.

The CPM credential was developed by the North American Registry of Midwives (NARM) in collaboration with the Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA), the Midwifery Education Accreditation Council (MEAC), and diverse stakeholders from across the United States, including consumers who later founded Citizens for Midwifery (CfM). The credential validates the knowledge, skills, and abilities vital to responsible midwifery practice and reflects and preserves the essential nature of midwifery care. The competency-based model for certification assures well-educated, skilled, and competent providers.

The requirements and process for achieving national certification as a CPM were implemented by NARM in 1994. Multiple pathways to certification were established, including graduation from an education program accredited by the Midwifery Education Accreditation Council (MEAC) or the Accreditation Commission for Midwifery Education (ACME), completion ofthe Portfolio Evaluation Process,or holding current legal recognition to practice in the United Kingdom, legal recognition in a state previously evaluated for educational equivalency, or comparable international training. Between 1994 and 2022, more than 4,354 midwives received the CPM certification, with 2600 certifications active in 2022.

All CPM candidates are required to demonstrate the acquisition of the required knowledge and skills and to have performed competently as primary midwives under supervision. Certification is renewed every three years, and all CPMs must obtain continuing education and participate in peer review for recertification. In addition, NARM requires that each CPM have written practice guidelines, a process for informed disclosure and consent with clients, including a HIPAA privacy policy, and that the CPM participates in a one-time cultural competency course for certification or recertification. Evidence of ongoing continuing education is required to maintain the CPM credential.

Qualifications for the credential are based on a job analysis and periodic surveys of practicing midwives to determine what midwives need to know and be able to do. This process is mandated by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA), which accredits national health credentials in the U.S., including the CPM, Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM), and Certified Midwife (CM). NCCA is the accrediting body of the Institute for Credentialing Excellence (ICE), formerly the National Organization for Competency Assurance (NOCA). The mission of ICE is to promote excellence in competency assurance for practitioners in all occupations and professions.

NARM’s most recent job analysis survey, conducted in 2016, identified the essential and current competencies necessary for safe and competent midwifery practice. Participation in the job analysis survey is one important way CPMs continue to define and set standards for the profession. Approximately one-third of all CPMs who currently hold the CPM credential participated in the 2016 survey.

For more information about the CPM credential visit www.narm.org

Legal Recognition of CPMs

As of October 17, 2024, CPMs have a path to licensure in 37 states and the District of Columbia:

Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Deleware, District of Columbia, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming.

NACPM Support for State Licensure

NACPM is committed to securing licensure for Certified Professional Midwives in all 50 states and U.S. territories based on the standards set by the profession for certification, education, scope of practice, and standard of care.  Licensure is key to making midwifery more widely accessible and enables CPMs to participate in an integrated system that includes opportunities for consultation, collaboration, referral, and multi-disciplinary peer review.   It is also a mechanism by which members of the mid­wifery profession are held accountable to the public for pro­viding safe care that is consistent with the scope of practice defined by the profession and upheld by state law and sub­sequent regulatory guidelines.

Understanding that midwifery regulation was historically used to restrict or eliminate midwifery, NACPM is committed to strengthening the profession, addressing barriers to full participation in the profession, particularly by people of color, and supporting legislation that facilitates access to care and contributes to a robust, more representative midwifery workforce.

NACPM provides support to states developing licensing legislation and to states improving or defending laws regulating CPMs.

US MERA Statement on the Licensure of Certified Professional Midwives and Principles for Model U.S. Midwifery Legislation and Regulation 

NACPM is a member association of the International Confederation of Midwives and embraces the ICM Global Vision for Strengthening Midwifery and the ICM Standards for Midwifery Regulation (2011).  These Global Standards serve as a guide to developing new legislation, amending existing legislation, and promoting changes that strengthen regulatory frameworks to support autonomous midwifery practice.