Note: "Out of Hospital" birth is defined as home birth or birth at a freestanding birth center, one that is not within the walls of a hospital.)
A note about pointed
questions: If you are embarrassed to ask the questions lest you offend the
midwife, don’t be. Any midwife who bristles about these questions needs to be
left in the dust. She should have complete composure, no defensiveness and be
clear and truthful in her answers. If she can’t act professional with you, how
will she act with a doctor in front of her if you transport? It’s a midwife’s
job to answer these questions; it’s your right to know the answers.
Are you licensed?
What are your credentials and experience?
Being licensed,
regardless of state is critical. Do not
hire a midwife practicing without a license.
Know the laws in your state. In
all states CNMs have a license, but CPMs are licensed in some states, not in
others, and illegal completely to practice in yet others. Even if you find a CPM who is licensed,
please thoroughly understand their credential because it is far less education, clinical practice, and experience than a
CNM. The philosophy of their credential
is also something to be concerned about.
How long have you been practicing as a primary
midwife for out of hospital birth? How many births have you attended as a doula? As an apprentice? A
midwifery assistant? How many births have you been the primary midwife with
supervision and then without supervision at a homebirth for? How many births
did you experience in the hospital setting?
I can’t stress this enough, asking the midwife
more pointed questions will give the woman more information than just, “How
many births have you been to?” But, what
should the answers be? Because there is no standardization in midwifery
education or skills training, the answer depends a lot on the woman. It’s difficult to evaluate philosophy and
character, indicators for how this person would handle your care in the event
of impending danger or crisis. The more
specific questions you ask, the more information you have. At a minimum, you’re looking for someone who
has experienced hospital births, complications, transfers as the primary
caregiver, and doesn’t hesitate to describe circumstances that were out of her
scope of practice whereby care was transferred.
Do you carry malpractice/liability insurance?
If your midwife does
not carry malpractice insurance, find another care provider. This is an enormous red flag as it says a
great deal about the philosophy under which that midwife is practicing. Malpractice insurance protects them as much
as it protects you. It establishes a
consistent set of guidelines for scope of practice, safety measures, and
professional development for the caregiver you are hiring. Without this is place, they can function in
whatever way they please…and if they do act negligently you have NO
recourse. Insurance is a mechanism to
ensure your safety and to help families who suffer negligent circumstances like
preventable birth injuries and preventable deaths. Don’t hire a midwife who isn’t responsible
enough to carry insurance.
How do you evaluate risk?
This is another
critical aspect of your conversation.
How much is too much risk and how will it be determined? I don’t know precisely the exact answer, but
your potential midwife should be able to explain exactly what she monitors,
looks for, when she might be concerned, when she would transfer your care.
What defines your scope of practice?
In other words, what
types of births do you take on and which would you consider too risky? Who regulates or determines your scope of
practice? If a midwife is running the
show by her own rules, there is a problem.
Ask for a copy of her scope of practice from whomever has issued her
credentials…it could be a state board via public health code or ACNM, a
national credentialing body for Nurse Midwives.
What are they permitted to take on in an out of hospital setting?
How do you define “high-risk”?
Some midwives don’t
think anything is too high risk for them to handle. Many claim to take on only low risk, normal
pregnancies, but somehow end up delivering breech babies, twins, women with
gestational diabetes, women with high blood pressure…and on and on. Even low risk, normal pregnancies can go
wrong in seconds, but at the very least, establish a boundary of low and high
risk in your own mind and with your midwife. Consult an OB and ask this question too.
Do you think a hospital is ever necessary and under what
circumstances?
Your midwife should be
specific about this. A general “of course
they are” isn’t going to cut it. This
question will help you get a sense for her attitude toward hospitals. Does it sound like a working relationship? Her answer shouldn’t be about mothers who
aren’t strong enough or who fatigue, they should be about specific concerns for
the labor and delivery of your baby…prolonged labor (more than 3 hours of
pushing with little to no progress), too much pain, meconium present, size of
the baby as determined with ultrasound before labor, baby’s position, multiples,
high blood pressure, VBAC, gestational diabetes, group B strep...etc.
What is your relationship with the local hospital? What privileges or practicing rights do you
have at the local hospital? Does the
nearest hospital have a Neonatal Intensive Care Team/Unit?
Only hire a midwife
who has a good standing with your local hospital. Don’t just take her word for it, ask the
manager of the Neonatal Care Unit, Nurses, Doctors, local paramedics. Ideally, hire a midwife who has practicing
rights or privileges to work and transfer along side you as part of your
continued care in the event of transfer.
If your nearest hospital doesn’t have a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit or
staff, out of hospital birth is not for you.
What hospital do you transfer to? What records & personnel transfer with
me? What would happen in the event of
transfer?
You need to know where
the nearest hospital is that includes a neonatal unit. It doesn’t really matter how many minutes
away the hospital is if your midwife doesn’t catch danger signs soon enough or
her fear/ego gets in the way of transferring you in the first place. A hospital 10 minutes away won’t matter once
the crisis has hit. The key is someone
skilled, equipped, and responsible enough to catch it before it gets to that point.
Midwives are also
notorious for taking less than detailed records or sending no records at all
during transfer. You need to know what
they note during labor, how that compares to an OB
or L&D nurse, and what a transfer would be like. (See post about what transferring is
like.)
Who determines/decides when to transfer? What
would you say to a mom who asks to transfer during labor? What complications warrant transfer? What is your rate of transfer?
You are hiring a midwife to attend
your birth as a professional, a so-called expert on birth. They need to be clear that they will tell you
when you are in danger and be a leader in deciding to transfer. The decision should never fall on you during
labor, nor should you ever be pressured to stay. If your midwife starts to tell you about how
long it will take for transfer to take place, that you’re so close…just a
little longer, or if it seems like your midwife is avoiding transfer, indecisive, or
stalling, get to the hospital! .
The list of transportable reasons is
endless and it’s the midwife’s professional responsibility to know what they
are. The midwife will surely say something like, “Breeches, twins, high blood
pressure, a fever, baby’s heart tones are questionable.” They are hired to know
when to transfer (non-emergency) and transport (emergency), but sometimes egos, fear, and mantra
get in the way.
Some states now have an
exhaustive list of complications during pregnancy and mandate which of those
requires a consultation with an OB and which
requires transfer altogether. If your
state does not have these guidelines in place, you are subject to the will of
the midwife, making out of hospital birth far more subjective, dangerous, and
unregulated. (Essentially a midwife can
do whatever she wants…low risk, high risk…etc.)
If during labor, you or your partner is questioning the situation at
all, please be a self advocate and transfer.
Regarding what the hospital transport
rate is, this can be taken any number of ways. Low transfer rate? She only
takes very low-risk women, maybe none who’re having their first baby. Or, maybe
she stays home hoping complications will resolve or she’s afraid to
transport…which directly puts you and your baby in danger. (See this website if you question whether this happens and how often.) Maybe she has a lot of experience and takes appropriately low-risk women. How are
you to know why she has a high or low rate of transfer? You can’t; it’s all in
how she sells herself.
Do you work in conjunction with an OB? May I have a few visits to get to know
him/her? Under what circumstances might I consult
with your OB?
A midwife should always have a working relationship with an OB. Before hiring
any midwife to attend your birth, schedule an appointment to interview the OB as well. Meet
with the OB at the beginning and at the end of
your pregnancy (before labor) at minimum. Talk with them about your plan for out of hospital birth and whether you are a good candidate for this kind of delivery. Share with them who you have chosen as your midwife. If there is no
relationship with an OB or the two are not
mutually agreeing on your plan of care, out of hospital birth should be
reconsidered.
Who is your
midwife back-up?
Some midwives take on more than 3 or 4
clients a month. Be sure to interview the back-up midwives, too, asking these
same pointed questions.
How often
will I see you during my pregnancy? How long will prenatal visits last?
I’ve never known a midwife to see
clients on anything different than the standard monthly until 28 weeks,
bi-weekly until 36-37 weeks and weekly until the birth. Plus, appointments are
almost always 45-60 minutes long, most of the time being spent on social
interaction… getting-to-know-you aspects. The actual medical/technical part
lasts less than 15 minutes. When going to an OB,
the social aspects are what is often what mothers see as missing. (Please see
an important post about emotional attachment and personal relationships, the
way they can adversely affect sound decision making and leave you vulnerable to
manipulation.)
What is your
philosophy about prenatal testing (Gestational Diabetes, Ultrasound, Group B
Strep)?
If your midwife tells you any of the
listed tests are dangerous or that they are unnecessary, keep looking. They do them for good reasons. If you’re considering more advanced testing,
please consult an OB.
What (emergency)
equipment do you use/carry?
The answer should be: Doppler
(preferably waterproof) with extra batteries, blood pressure cuff (two sizes),
thermometer, glucometer with in-date supplies, lancets, IV equipment with
in-date fluids (Lactated Ringers, Sodium Chloride, Dextrose 5% Lactated Ringers
are the most common types of fluids needed in birth), in-date Pitocin (which is
supposed to be kept cool), Methergine (IM and tabs), Cytotec (for postpartum
hemorrhage), in-date lidocaine, in-date sutures of at least two sizes (one
smaller one for the labia), in-date Erythromycin eye ointment and Vitamin K for
the baby, in-date antibiotics for GBS+ women, scissors, needle holders, forceps
(not the kind that pull babies out), oxygen (I always carried two tanks… one
for mom, one for baby), a bag and mask with new masks for each baby (they are
marketed as disposable; most midwives I knew re-used the masks [after
cleaning]), in-date blood draw supplies, in-date catheters, and a Sharps
container.
It can be hard to know what answers
you’re looking for when you ask a midwife about various complications. The above list is a minimum and is no guarantee
that they will have what they need when an emergency arises. When emergencies come along they do so
quickly, sometimes w/o warning on low-risk, normal pregnancies. The best place to handle complications is in
the hospital. More important than any
equipment is a midwife who appreciates and is skilled enough to spot trouble
before it’s too late and has the respect for birth to get you the help you need.
If your midwife starts to use fear tactics, telling you the horrors of cesareans, that epidurals will lead your child to be a drug addict, that fetal heart monitoring is only so insurance companies can make a profit, or showing you disturbing videos about circumcision, find another care provider.
Please see our FAQ Page for more information.
Find your state’s public health code and determine what
regulations there are for midwives in your state. If there are none, that is a red flag.
Nurse Midwives in MI are currently defined under "Nursing". You will find next to no rules even for nurse midwives in our state. CPMs, lay midwives, & birth centers are not regulated at all. There are no safety guidelines for out of hospital birth in the state of Michigan, making standards of education, care, and practice inconsistent and making accountability nearly impossible. Out of hospital birth in Michigan is an unregulated practice at present. Please see Michigan's Public Health Code for more information.
Written by Barbara E. Herrera, LM, CPM (aka Navelgazing Midwife) and augmented by Sara Snyder