Q&A with the Big Push for Midwives

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qa QUESTION #2: The Big Push for Midwives seems to be the center of a very successful campaign for midwives; with pro midwife legislation having been passed in Idaho, as well as Missouri, where the law was tested in the State Supreme Court and won, despite the direct advocacy of the AMA in the form of a friend of the court brief. Recently legislation passed in Indiana, there is also legislation pending in states such as Alabama, and there is an effort to get legislation written in many others. How much of this effort has been grassroots on the part of midwives in these states and how much of this can be attributed to the Big Push? What is the most notable accomplishment of the Big Push to date?

ANSWER: The Big Push for Midwives is a consumer-driven campaign, made up of every day people who have either had their babies at home or in freestanding birth centers under the care of CPMs or who strongly believe that this should be an option for pregnant women and their families to choose. Legislators most definitely take notice and respond when they hear from a significant number of constituents who are being denied access to health care providers and options. Because midwives are at a disadvantage in the legislative arena, having to compete with much more powerful and well-financed physician groups for legislators’ attention, our strategy from the beginning has been develop a consumer-led campaign, with a grassroots base made up of a diverse coalition of constituencies, including Democrats and Republicans, feminists and Christian conservatives, Amish and Mennonite, and pro-life and pro-choice activists all working together to defend our right to choose how and where our babies are born.

One of the Big Push’s most notable accomplishments has been our success in transforming media coverage of Certified Professional Midwives and out-of-hospital birth from almost universally negative to consistently positive. Prior to our media outreach campaign, which we launched in 2007, the media’s focus was almost exclusively on a handful of high-profile criminal prosecutions in states where there were no laws or regulations governing the practice of direct-entry midwifery. As a result, the impression that came through loud and clear in the media was that midwives who deliver babies at home are illegal, untrained, and unscrupulous women who routinely endanger the lives of mothers and babies. Since we began our campaign to raise awareness about the CPM credential, the safety, benefits, and cost effectiveness of the care they provide, as well as the need for legislation in all states to license and regulate direct-entry midwives using the CPM credential, the shift in the tone and the content of our media coverage has been remarkable.

When journalists receive objective information about Certified Professional Midwives and out-of-hospital care, they are no longer interested in pursuing sensationalized and simplistic storylines that perpetuate age-old stereotypes and misinformation, which in turn helps us as advocates to direct legislators and policy-makers to more in-depth and thoughtful media coverage about CPMs and out-of-hospital birth and the grassroots movement to advocate on behalf of increasing access to both.

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