Improving Our Maternity Care Now Through Midwifery

This contribution reprints the Executive Summary from a technical report issued by the National Partnership for Women & Families within its larger Improving Our Maternity Care Now project. This project identifies the priority of continuing the long, challenging work of maternity care system tran...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of perinatal education 2022-10, Vol.31 (4), p.181-183
Hauptverfasser: Sakala, Carol, Hernández-Cancio, Sinsi, Mackay, Erin, Wei, Rachel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This contribution reprints the Executive Summary from a technical report issued by the National Partnership for Women & Families within its larger Improving Our Maternity Care Now project. This project identifies the priority of continuing the long, challenging work of maternity care system transformation, while also increasing access to high-performing care models that can help meet current urgent, dire needs for equitable high-quality care now. The Midwifery report is the first in a series of four reports on these care models, which share distinctive features. They reliably provide highly appropriate services that minimize both underuse of beneficial practices and overuse of unneeded, often harmful practices. They prioritize relationship-based, whole person care that builds trust, confidence and resilience and helps meet the varied needs of birthing families. They incorporate skills and knowledge to support the innate physiologic processes of birthing people and their fetuses/newborns. They achieve remarkable results for consequential outcomes relative to standard maternity care. And childbearing people greatly desire access to these forms of care relative to current access and use. Community-based versions offering trustworthy, respectful, culturally-congruent care are especially powerful. The midwifery report includes recommendations for federal policymakers, state policymakers, and private sector decision makers to increase access to midwifery care. It was carried out in partnership with the American College of Nurse-Midwives, the National Association of Certified Professional Midwives, and the National Black Midwives Alliance. Access the full project through https://www.nationalpartnership.org/improvingmaternitycare/ . The project is supported by the Yellow Chair Foundation and is reprinted with permission. Reproduced with permission of the National Partnership for Women & Families.
ISSN:1058-1243
1548-8519
DOI:10.1891/JPE-2022-0014