Providing Mother-Baby Friendly Education and Support

Miracle Birth

Our "school" is society: we are educating parents and professionals about a wholistic, evidence-based mother and baby centered model of care which is aimed to improve quality of maternity care, lower costs, improve birth outcomes and reduce perinatal health disparities while acheiving public health goals for perinatal health.

Our Non-Profit Organization:

THE ASSOCIATION FOR WHOLISTIC MATERNAL AND NEWBORN HEALTH

Mother-Baby Friendly Support and Education

“Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane”

-Martin Luther King, Jr. (25 March 1966)

 

We are a training and  and advocacy organization with a  grassroots, community-based approach to support direct-service providers in promoting the health of mothers, infants, and families. Our purpose  is to promote the availability of skilled maternity care providers including nurses, midwives, doulas and community health promoters,   and  to promote evidence-based maternity care aimed to reduce perinatal health disparities. The organization trains community perinatal  health workers at all levels and in a variety of settings, and  designs community-based initiatives,  engages and mobilize  diverse stakeholders to  develop  programs  and policies that improve maternal and child health.  We are a 501c3 non-profit  California educational organization incorporated in 1993.

To register for our trainings go to:

http://association-wholistic-maternal-newborn-health.eventbrite.com

 

WHO WE ARE

We are a dedicated group of  public health professionals, childbirth educators, maternal-infant health advocates, midwives, doctors, mental health professionals  and community members committed to improving the quality of maternity care and making an impact in reducing ethnic disparities in birth outcomes of mothers and infants in Los Angeles.

 

ABOUT OUR ORGANIZATION

We are a training and  and advocacy organization with a  grass roots, community-based approach to support direct-service providers in promoting the health of mothers, infants, and families.  The organization trains community perinatal  health workers,  designs community-based initiatives, engages and mobilizes  diverse stakeholders in collaboration to develop  wholistically-oriented programs  and policies that improve maternal and child health. Wholistic Midwifery School of Southern California is a 501c3 non-profit California educational corporation, Wholistic Midwifery School of Southern California   founded in 1993 by Shelly Girard, LM, CPM, MPH, a California Medical Board Licensed Midwife with 40 years experience who holds a Masters in Public Health from UCLA, and  Lorri Walker, CNM, NP, a Certified Nurse Midwife and Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner, owner of Southcoast Midwifery and Birth Center in Lake Forest, CA, and Cordelia Hanna-Cheruiyot, who has a Masters in Public Health in Health Education and Promotion/Maternal Child Health from Loma Linda University, is  a childbirth and lacatation educator, assistant midwife,  doula and childbirth activist. In 2010, Lorri and Shelly turned over the leadership of the organization to Cordelia who now serves as the Executive Director, guiding the work of a dedicated group of paid staff, paid consultants, student interns  and volunteers, supported by a small team of professional advisers from various disciplines including nursing, public health, mental health, midwifery, non-profit management and others. In 2011, we established the DBA The Association for Wholistic Maternal and Newborn Health.

 

FUNDING

We are currently funded by California Community Foundation and The Laurence H. Tribe Charitable Foundation, Inc. We rely upon grant funding and the donations of citizens who believe in our important work of serving disadvantaged pregnant women and their infants. Considering making a tax-deductible donation, which you can earmark for any purpose you envision or a current project.

 

OUR PURPOSE

Our purpose  is to promote the availability and use of  skilled maternity care including nurses, midwives, doulas and community health promoters, at all levels and in a variety of settings. Through the education and professional development of qualified practitioners, we seek to provide wholistic, multidiscliplinary maternity care in varied settings including clinics, private homes, hospitals and freestanding birth centers. We also seek  to promote evidence-based maternity and infant  care  in order to reduce perinatal health disparities.

 

WHAT WE DO

We  provide  training for midwives, nurses, doulas and perinatal community health workers who are interested in creating supportive environments for childbearing women  and their families. We   promote evidence-based maternity care,  and a  ”self-growth” approach to pregnancy and childbirth.  We are striving to  improve perinatal health outcomes such as infant mortality, low birth weight and maternal mortality through the revitalization of “traditional” birth attendants–midwives and community-based doulas.   We are  developing and implementing innovative initiatives that aim to  close the gap on health disparities, including breastfeeding peer counselor trainings, nurse-education trainings,  community-based doula programs and more.

Agencies and Individuals Who Have Participated in Our Trainings and Consultations

  • Maternal Child Health Access
  • South Los Angeles Health Projects
  • Pasadena Public Health Department Black Infant Health Program
  • Alta Med  Orange County
  • Shields for Families Best Babies Program
  • Family Care Specialists
  • South Bay Family Health Care
  • Pediatric Therapy Network Early Head Start Program
  • Children’s Bureau
  • Family Care Specialists
  • Perinatal Nurse Associates
  • Glendale Memorial Hospital
  • LA BioMed Women’s Healthcare Clinic
  • Mt. San Antonio College
  • La Liberertad Medical Clinic
  • East Los Angeles Doctor’s Hospital
  • Nu Baby Doula Services
  • T.H.E. Clinic
  • White Memorial Hospital
  • Dr. Sepideh Sahedy, MD
  • MPH students from UCLA School of Public Health
  • BSN Students from UCLA School of Nursing
  • Central City Community Health Center
  • Inmed Partnership for Children
  • Protoypes Black Infant Health Program
  • LA BioMed Perinatal Access Project
  • South Bay Family Health Center
  • Alta Med Los Angeles
  • Oceanview Pain Treatment Center
  • Early Childhood Development Student, Pierce College
  • UCLA Center for Community Health Mentor Mother Neighborhood Well-Being Project
  • Labor and Postpartum Doulas in Private Practice

 

WHAT WE MEAN BY ”WHOLISTIC” MATERNITY CARE

Our intent is to mobilize the community to  implement culturally appropriate wholistic approaches to perinatal health so as to improve outcomes and quality of maternity care in all settings: clinics, hospitals, birth centers and domiciliary settings.  We promote an integrated, multidisciplinary approach to maternity care which encompasses the   physiological, psychological, and socio-ecological determinants of health.   Our vision is to work in harmony and  collaboration with a variety of care providers, both  conventional and alternative including hospitals, clinics, medical doctors, nurses, midwives, mental health specialists, health educators, nutritionists and paraprofessionals (such as doulas), community health promoters, breastfeeding peer counselors and perinatal case managers, as well as  chiropractors and other allied health professionals with specialization in maternity and newborn health.

 

OUR VISION

Our purpose is  to improve perinatal health outcomes and quality of care, reduce health disparities,  reduce neonatal and maternal disability and   death. We are working to  achieve Healthy People 2020 objectives for maternal-infant health and  Millennium Development Goal  5:  to  reduce maternal mortality. We are also working to   reduce disparities in prematurity and infant mortality. We are taking a global health approach to address urban health disparities in the U.S.  by  training skilled birth attendants (midwives and nurses) and paraprofessional community perinatal  health promoters  from disadvantaged urban communities where perinatal health disparities are greatest. Public  health and midwifery are holistic models of care:  they are collaborative, multi-disciplinary,  rooted in the community, promoting the health of the community members.  Our vision marries the  midwifery model of care with public health promotion. Our approach to  improve maternity care is to  promote the midwifery model of care and forward the midwifery profession.  We believe doing so will help us  achieve public health objectives for maternal and infant health.
 We collaborate with  agencies with maternal-child health programs, prenatal clinics and social service  providers. We train perinatal  health workers  (lay health promoters) and other professionals,  who are dedicated to  improving the health of mothers, infants  and children in their communities.  We provide training to organizations  and institutions  in “mother-baby friendly” approaches to maternity care.  We are working to  mobilize  multi-disciplinary  stakeholders to  implement  wholistic policies and programs that will  improve maternal and child health in Los Angeles. We beleive in the power of normal, natural childbirth to  transform women’s lives, as well as their families and communities. In short, we believe in the motto “peace on earth begins with birth”.

 

OUR ADVISORY BOARD

We are now accepting applications for  our  Board of Advisors, who are professionals from various fields including nursing, midwifery, medicine, mental health, public health, social services, education, public administration, non-profit management, etc, who are willing to  dedicate  time, talent to ensure that our mission  is  realized.   The Board  meets via conference call once per year and as needed  to  provide support and guidance.  Board members may also also participate in  our fundraising and community awareness  events, and  committees.  The commitment is for a minimum of 1  year. If you are interested in joining our Board of Advisors please contact us.

Download Volunteer Application. Volunteer Application

 

OUR MISSION

We are committed to improving access to quality care for all pregnant women and ensuring equity in maternal-infant health

In 2000, 189 countries pledged to end extreme poverty worldwide through the achievement of eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). MDG 5 was set to improve maternal health with the goal to reduce maternal mortality by three-fourths by 2015 (Target 5.A). As Americans, we seem to think that maternal and infant deaths occur “over there” in lesser developed regions who do not have our wealth, advanced technology and highly trained medical experts. Many believe that here in America where the majority of births occur in hospitals with obstetrical doctors and nurses, maternal death is a phenomenon of the past. However, maternal mortality ratios in the United States are higher than those of many other industrialized nations. Moreover, these ratios have not changed in the past 20 years, and large racial disparities persist in measures of both maternal mortality and morbidity. In an affluent developed country, maternal deaths should serve as rare sentinel events, highlighting opportunities for prevention and reduction of morbidities. However, existing surveillance efforts are poorly developed, and pregnancy-related deaths and illnesses tend to be under-reported.

Amnesty International has stated in their report on maternal mortality in the United States, Deadly Delivery, maternal health is  a human right. Even in America today, women die of childbirth related causes all too often.

This is especially true in communities of color. According to the American Public Health Association, maternal mortality is the leading perinatal health disparity between blacks and whites in America. African-American women die of pregnancy-related causes at 4- 5 times the rate of Caucasian women– a startling statistic which has not changed in over 4 decades. Maternal death rates are also higher for Hispanic and Native American women. Maternal mortality ratios have increased from 6.6 deaths per 100,000 live births in 1987 to 13.3 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2006. While some of the recorded increase is due to improved data collection, the fact remains that maternal mortality ratios have risen significantly. The USA spends more than any other country on health care, and more on maternal health than any other type of hospital care. Despite this, women in the USA have a higher risk of dying of pregnancy-related complications than those in 49 other countries. Maternal deaths are only the tip of the iceberg. During 2004 and 2005, more than 68,000 women nearly died in childbirth in the USA. Each year, 1.7 million women suffer a complication that has an adverse effect on their health. According to Amnesty International, “This is not just a public health emergency – it is a human rights crisis. Women in the USA face a range of obstacles in obtaining the services they need. The health care system suffers from multiple failures: discrimination; financial, bureaucratic and language barriers to care; lack of information about maternal care and family planning options; lack of active participation in care decisions; inadequate staffing and quality protocols; and a lack of accountability and oversight.” (from Deadly Delivery: The Maternal Health Crisis in the USA).

 The consequences of maternal deaths are far reaching, leaving a void in the a family and the society she would have contributed to. A crucial solution to preventing avoidable maternal deaths and injuries is quality and accessible care to all women. The leading non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have determined that there are several factors contributing to maternal deaths. One of them is lack of access to skilled birth attendants at birth. Many leading organizations have recommended skilled midwifery care as a solution to reduce maternal deaths.

In addition, infant mortality is a grave problem in the United States, affecting a disproportionate number of African-American babies. Premature births are associated with higher infant mortality and African-American women are 2-1/2 times more likely to give birth to a baby too soon and too small than Caucasian women, even after adjusting for socioeconomic status. This means even  affluent, well-educated African-American women are more likely to deliver her baby too early. Infants left behind after a mother’s death often fare poorly and often die as well.   Also, infants born too small and too soon often die or if they survive, have lifelong disabilities. In many places in the world, women give birth with only a friend or relative to help.  In the US, minority women from disadvantaged communities far too often receive an inferior quality of care — this is called health inequity. Skilled Midwives, Doulas and community health promoters are crucial to improving the quality of care provided to mothers and preventing avoidable deaths and injuries.

We are committed to ensuring skilled attendants at all births

This is considered to be the single most critical intervention for ensuring safe motherhood. When women have access to quality prenatal care they can have healthier pregnancies. While  undisturbed birth proceeds normally for the vast majority of women who are in good health, all women deserve to  have a skilled  attendant present to recognize problems early and to intervene and manage complications should they occur. Skilled birth attendants include physicians and professional midwives — both Certified Nurse-Midwives and Licensed Midwives/Certified Professional Midwives.

We are committed to developing an opportunity for women’s economic empowerment and vocational development in communities of color

Plans for a freestanding birth center and midwifery training center are underway. We are also working with existing clinics to integrate  Licensed Midwives, Certified Nurse-Midwives, midwifery students, community-based doulas and breastfeeding peer counselors into conventional prenatal care. We will be located in a region of Los Angeles where birth outcomes are the poorest and provide an opportunity for urban renewal and vocational training by establishing a midwifery training birthing center in the region.

We intend to create  a compassionate, harmonic birthing environment for families

In the form of a birth and family resource center that embraces cultural diversity and a holistic model of care and promotes mother/infant bonding and secure attachment.

We are ensuring linkages and solid collaboration

We are working with existing hospitals, clinics, birth outcomes focused programs, and community based organizations, and lay health promoters such as doulas and community health outreach workers and home visitors.

We support increased integration of midwifery and doula care

We support the integration of these qualified professionals into  standard prenatal and postnatal care. Studies show that doulas and midwives make a difference in the outcomes of births for women and their infants.

STAFF

Cordelia Hanna Cheruiyot, MPH, CHES, CCE, CBA, Executive Director, Prinicpal Course Leader

Cordelia earned her Masters in Public Health (MPH) in Health Education and Promotion and Maternal Child Health from Loma Linda University in Loma Linda, CA in 2008. She is  a Certified Health Education Specialist, accredited by National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, the gold standard for professional health educators. Cordelia has worked for twenty years as a childbirth educator, breastfeeding educator-counselor, birth assistant/doula and health education consultant and midwife assistant in private practice, clinics, hospitals, doctor’s offices, and federally qualified health centers in Los Angeles.  Cordelia is a Certified Childbirth Educator and Certified Birth Assistant accredited by The Association of Labor Assistants and Childbirth Educators (ALACE) and Lactation Educator-Counselor. Cordelia worked for nearly a decade at The Pasadena Public Health Department on the Maternal Child and Adolescent Health Outreach Program  and The Black Infant Health Program, a state-funded program to reduce African-American health disparities. While working at The Health Department, she conducted trainings for staff and community members and managed a volunteer doula program and breastfeeding peer counselor program, and developed a childbirth education curriculum and taught patient education classes. In addition, Cordelia is Co-Chair of the Evidence in Action Committee of the Coalition for Improving Maternity Services (CIMS), and formerly was the C0-Chair of the Los Angeles Best Babies Network Healthy Births Learning Collaborative for SPA 3 (San Gabriel Valley).

Jazzmin D. Nelson, LVN, CBPC – Administrative Assistant

Jazzmin Nelson, LVN, CBPC is a Licensed Vocational Nurse and a Certified Breastfeeding Peer Counselor. She is also an aspiring nurse-midwife. Jazzmin’s  responsibilities with the organization are to help coordinate the trainings we offer and general administrative duties. She is a mother of one  young daughter.

PROJECTS CURRENTLY UNDERWAY

$12,000 Grant (2011) & $25,000 Grant  (2012( Received from California Community Foundation for Nursing Education and Hospital Improvements – “Hearts and Hands: The Art of Mother-Baby Friendly Nursing , A Proposal for High Quality Maternity Care”(a training for hospital labor and delivery nurses and administrators).

Our 501 c-3 non-profit organization Wholistic Midwifery School of Southern California (DBA the Association for Wholistic Maternal and Newborn Health) received a  $12,000 grant from California Community Foundation for Nursing Education and Hospital Improvements. Our scope of work for FY 2011-2012 is to develop and conduct a training on Mother-Baby Friendly maternity care for labor and delivery nurses and administrators at a Los Angeles hospital with the goal to help a local hospital or hospitals implement the  The Mother Friendly Childbirth Initiative, 10 evidenced based practices to improve maternal and infant care. The evidence supporting the MFCI was published in the peer-reviewed  Journal of Perinatal Education,  and is available online at http://motherfriendly.org.    “Hearts and Hands: The Art  and Science of Mother-Baby Friendly Nursing, A Proposal for High Quality Maternity Care” will instruct nurses  and administrators on evidence-based maternity and neonatal care practices which optimize maternal well being and mother-newborn attachment with the goal to lower rates of pain medication use, augmentation of labor and cesarean section and instrumental deliveries and  improve breastfeeding success.  We will be offering a 3 day training in May 2012 in Los Angeles for hospital labor and delivery nurses and administrators. If you are a hospital labor and delivery nurse or a hospital administrator interested in this training opportunity, please contact us. or go to: http://mother-baby-friendly-nursing-training.eventbrite.com.

CONSULTANTS

We are thrilled to welcome our consultants for this project,Vanessa Nicholas, CNM and Nicette Jukelevics, MA, ICCE,  Jeanette Schwartz, MSN, ICCE, CD  and Marilyn Hildreth, RN, FACCE, CD from our collaborating partner organization,   The Coalition for Improving Maternity Services.

Vanessa Nicolas, BSN, CNM,CLE,  Associate Consultant, Lead Trainer, Heart and Hands: The Art and Science of Mother-Baby Friendly Nursing

Vanessa Nicolas, CNM, CLE

Vanessa brings many years of clinical experience and expertise to our organization. She is a Certified Nurse-Midwife with 20 + years experience, and over 30 years experience is a Professional Nurse. She has delivered over 2000 babies safely and is a recognized lecturer and clinical preceptor. Vanessa earned her certificate as a Nurse Midwife from University of Southern California in 1988 and her BSN from The University of South Alabama in 1982. Vanessa worked as a nurse-midwife at Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science for 13 years where she was a lecturer and clinical instructor for midwifery, medical and PA students. She also worked as a Nurse-Midwife and Lactation Educator at LA County UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles for and as a Staff RN at LA County/USC Medical Center on the high risk obstetrical unit. She is also a nursing instructor for ADN students at Virginia College.

 

 

Nicette Jukelevics, MA, ICCE, Curriculum Co-Developer, Principal Consultant/Researcher and Co-Instructor, Heart and Hands: The Art and Science of Mother-Baby Friendly Nursing Training

Nicette Jukelevics,MA, ICCE

 

Nicette Jukelevics is the author of Understanding The Dangers of Cesarean Birth (Praeger Books, 2008). Nicette is a recognized expert on Cesarean Section, maternity care researcher and educator. She is a certified childbirth educator accredited by International Childbirth Education Association (ICEA) with 30 years experience teaching in the hospital, as well as university teaching experience. For 28 years, she taught prepared childbirth classes and other topics at Torrance Memorial Hospital. She is also a parenting educator and founder of The Center for Family.

 

 

 

 

Marilyn Hildreth, RN, IBCLC, FACCE, ICCE, LCCE, IAT-CE-D, CD(ICEA/ DONA) - CIMS Mother Friendly Nurse Recognition Program, Co-Trainer, Heart and Hands: The Art and Science of Mother-Baby  Friendly Nursing Training

Marilyn Hildreth, RN, IBCLC, ICCE, CD

 

Marilyn’s professional background includes over 35 years of experience in Maternal Child Health Nursing, including supervisory, flight, and staff nursing. She has also been a certified childbirth educator for 30 years, doula trainer for 10 years, and serves as an instructor for various ICEA Workshops. Marilyn currently serves on the CIMS Leadership Team as Chair of the CIMS Mother Friendly Nurse Recognition Program and is past Education Chair for the International Childbirth Education Association Board of Directors.  Hildreth  consults with local and international hospitals wanting to implement the CIMS Mother Friendly Childbirth Initiative into their practice. She is a International Board Certified Lactation Counselor, ICEA Certified Childbirth Educator, ICEA and DONA Certified Birth Doula, Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator.

 

 

 

Jeanette Schwartz, MSN, RNC, ICCE, CD -Director, Maternity Care Center Woodwinds Health Campus, Woodbury, MN (a Mother-Baby Friendly Institution), Co-Trainer, Heart and Hands, The Art and Science of Mother-Baby Friendly Nursing Training

Jeanette Schwartz, MSN, ICCE, CD

Jeanette is the Director, Maternity Care Center Woodwinds Health Campus, Woodbury, MN and past President, International Childbirth Education Association (2008-2010). She is also Adjunct Faculty in the University of Minnesota School of Nursing, and was Chair of Minnesota AWHONN (2007-2010). Formerly she was the Director, Medical/Surgical/Pediatric Unit at Woodwinds Health Campus, Woodbury, MN. Jeanette was the President, Minnesota Perinatal Organization (2001-2002). She was a Staff Nurse Labor and Delivery at Unity Hospital, Fridley, MN and Staff Nurse Labor Delivery, Special Care Nursery. Jeanette is a ICEA Approved Trainer and Certified Childbirth Educator with International Childbirth Education Association and Lamaze International. She is also has her Inpatient Obstetric Nursing Certification, National Certification Corporation for the Obstetric/Gynecologic/Neonatal Nursing Specialties. In addition, Jeanette is a Babies and You Instructor for The March of Dimes, Twin Cities Chapter, and has her Doula Certification through Doulas of North America, and her Doula Trainer Certification with Doulas of North America. Jeanette attended Metropolitan State University, St. Paul, MN, where she received her Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 1996, and her Masters of Arts in Nursing Leadership from Bethel College, St. Paul, MN in 2000.

 

The Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Training and Certification Program

This course is a 3 day, 20-hour course designed to give women skills and knowledge to support  breastfeeding mothers and promote breastfeeding. Focus is on promoting breastfeeding in disadvantaged communities. For case managers, home visitors, health educators, doulas and others. Coming in July, 2012.

Cordelia Hanna-Cheruiyot, MPH, CHES, CCE, CBA, LE, Lead Instructor

-and-

Dr. Sayida Peprah, Psy. D., Certified Doula, Guest Instructor, The Breastfeeding Peer Counselor Training and Certification Program

Dr. Sayida Peprah, Psy.D., CD

Sayida Peprah  has a Doctorate of Psychology in Clinical Psychology, with a Multicultural Clinical-Community Emphasis, from the California School of Professional Psychology at Alliant International University. Dr. Peprah’s background, both academically and in the field, afford her unique competence in instructing courses, counseling and consulting, from a multicultural perspective. Dr. Peprah has a strong belief and background in cultural competence and, in effort to expand this, regularly participates in international cultural immersion studies. Previously, she has traveled to Ghana, Mexico, Egypt and India, studying mental health approaches, indigenous culture and local spiritual traditions. Dr. Peprah is dedicated to contributing her academic and personal expertise, both in the field, as a counselor/therapist and as an instructor/facilitator in academic, non-profit, government and corporate sectors.  Sayida is also a Certified  Doula, owner of Conscious Surrender Birthing. She is married and a mother of two daughters. For more information about Sayida, go to: http://SayidaPeprah.synthasite.com

 

 

PROJECTS IN DEVELOPMENT

Spanish Community Perinatal Support Specialist Training – Coming Summer and Fall 2012

Thanks to the generous donation  of $2500 by The Laurence H. Tribe Charitible Foundation, Inc., we will be offering a  Spanish Community Perinatal Support Specialist Training and creating a volunteer doula  network serving the Medi-Cal population of Los Angeles. Community-based doulas have an expanded role beyond the traditional role of providing support during labor and postpartum. They are culturally  and liguistically competent because they are members of the community they serve, provide one-on-one prenatal education for health behavior modification, and  support  clients to increase access to community resources and comply with prenatal care. Another important role is providing social support to buffer the impact of maternal stress which may lead to preterm labor. The literature has shown that social support can reduce stress that often leads to preterm labor. Yet little research has been done on the role of doulas in reducing preterm labor. Furthermore, doulas, as non-traditional providers have too often been excluded from public funding.

There is a tremendous need for Community Based Doulas working within the Latino community. Within 20 years, Latinos are predicted  to be 60% of the California population.  42% of teenage pregnancies are among Latina women, the highest teenage pregnancy rate in the U.S., at 90.5 per 100 among women 15-19 years of age. These women  are vulnerable to poverty, inadequate health care and welfare dependence and lack of access to culturally and linguistically appropriate health education. 34% lack health insurance, the highest among all ethnic groups. In addition, there is a shortage of culturally competent health educators and misperceptions and myths abound among Latinas,  especially among teenagers,  regarding sexuality, contraception, childbearing and breastfeeding, and there are numerous language and cultural barriers to accessing information and services. Mexican-American women suffer disproportionately from diabetes, have higher rates of obesity than non-Hispanic Caucasians. Maternal overweight can lead to gestational diabetes in pregnancy, which is associated with childhood obesity and diabetes in their children. Puerto Ricans have the highest infant mortality of all Hispanic groups, suffer disproportionately from low birth weight, and Mexican Americans are 2.5 times more likely than non-Hispanic Caucasians to begin prenatal care in the third trimester, or receive none at all.

This project will train Spanish speaking women to be  Perinatal Support Specialists with skills as  birth and postpartum doulas to serve as a team of volunteer labor companions and postpartum care providers  to low-income Latina pregnant women and mothers. Working with local agencies who provide case management and home visitation and prenatal care through the Medi-Cal CPSP program, we will form a network of educated, culturally and linguistically competent birth and postpartum doulas and breastfeeding peer counselors providing free birth and postpartum support services to and childbirth education to Latino families.

Doula support is associated with fewer cesarean sections, decreased rates of induction and pain medication use, and decreased postpartum depression and improved maternal-infant interaction and breastfeeding initiation. Please contact us for further information. Scholarships  and work study are available.

 Family Birth and Resource Center – Coming Soon

We are gathering community support and evoking the commitment of the Los Angeles midwifery and public health sectors to implement  an out of hospital childbearing  and family resource center and school of midwifery in a disadvantaged community of  Los Angeles.  If you  believe in this vision and want to make this  dream a reality,  join us! Contact us to volunteer your time and talents  and  to participate in our community engagement events.  In addition to the freestanding birth  center,  we will establish a prenatal clinic (accepting Medi-Cal and  PPO insurance),  a pediatric clinic and a family resource center for  health education  offering perinatal health education classes, prenatal yoga, infant massage, hypnosis, a reading and resource room,  and the like. Maternity care  at the prenatal clinic and birth center will be provided by  Certified Nurse Midwives, Licensed Midwives, midwifery students, and Pediatric Nurse Practitioners. In addition, we will offer support by  birth and postpartum doulas, breastfeeding peer counselors and community health  outreach workers and  health promoters.  We are establishing a school of professional midwifery where student midwives pursuing either  the Certified Professional Midwife (CPM) credential, California Licensed  Midwife (LM)  credential  or  Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM)  credential will  learn side-by-side in the classroom taught by experienced Certified Nurse-Midwives and Licensed Midwives and other allied health professionals. Our students will receive supervised clinical training in  community clinics, homebirth practices, hospitals and the freestanding birth center, guided by experienced licensed healthcare professionals.

Our freestanding birth and family resource center will be located in a community of Los Angeles (yet to be determined) where birth outcomes are poorest so as to achieve public health goals for maternal and infant health improvement.

We will offer Centering Pregnancy, an innovative model of group prenatal care which empowers clients to take responsibility for their health and well being while providing social support for participants. We will also offer  our clientele community health promoters/promatoras who provide home visitation, doula labor and postpartum support, and breastfeeding peer counselors. We will accept Medi-Cal and PPO Insurance. We will have an arrangement with a hospital to provide obstetrical  and pediatric emergency services.

 School of Midwifery – Coming Soon

Our school will be a 3 year Midwifery Education Accredidtation Council (MEAC) accredited program offering supervised clinical training in an out of hospital setting plus  academic instruction. Students will be prepared for the North American Registry of Midwives (NARM) Exam. eligible to become Certified Professional Midwives. Graduates will also be eligible to take the licensing examination offered by the California Medical Board. We will meet Midwifery Education Accreditation Council (MEAC) standards,  and  California Medical Board Division of Midwifery Licensing standards. Nurse-Midwifery students who desire clinical training experience in out-of-hospital birth settings will also  have an opportunity to receive supervised clinical instruction in a variety of settings including clinics, birth centers, hospitals and homes. While the school will not discriminate on the basis of ethnicity, religion, age, gender or sexual orientation, our emphasis is on recruiting aspiring midwives of color from communities where birth outcomes are poorest and midwives are least represented. We will also train doulas, community health promoters and breastfeeding peer counselors from communities where the health disparities are poorest.

 Our Clinical Educators and Academic Advisors

  Our midwifery school instructors and parent educators will be professionals in the midwifery, public health, and maternal infant health field including Certified Nurse-Midwives (CNMs), Licensed Midwives (LMs),Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs), Physicians (MDs), Nurse-Practitioners (NPs), Nurse-Educators, Public Health Nurses (PHNs), Health Educators, Certified Childbirth Educators (CCE’s), Marriage and Family Therapists (MFTs), Clinical Psychologists (Psy.Ds), Certified Lactation Educators (CLEs), doula trainers etc. If you are a professional and would like to become one of our instructors, please contact us.

When will we open our doors?

We are a few years away from implementation;  we’re  currently  in the “community needs assessment” phase of this project. For now,  our “school” is society at large: our purpose to promote wholistic perinatal health care  and a multi-disciplinary approach to maternity care  in a variety of settings.

 

Please stay tuned for further updates and progress!

Donate your time, talents, resources, expertise!

“The question should not be is it possible. Rather, the question should be is it worth trying to do.”- Allard Lowenstein

Make a tax-deductible donation!

Contact Information:

Email: inquiry@LA-Birth-Center-Midwifery-School.org

626-388-2191

Download a PDF Fact Sheet: LA Birth Center Midwifery SchoolPDF Logo 16px

Get Involved: Join our cause on Facebook!

Music: “Motherless Children” Performed by Roseanne Cash

From soundtrack to  “No Woman, No Cry” a Film  about maternal mortality by Christy Turlington Burns.

For more information, go to Every Mother Counts.