The Boston Globe

Penny Simkin, childbirth educator, ‘mother of the doula movement,’ 85

- By Penelope Green

Penny Simkin, a childbirth educator and author who was often described as the “mother of the doula movement,” died April 11 at her home in Seattle. She was 85.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, said her daughter, Linny Simkin.

Penny Simkin, a physical therapist turned birth educator, was a pioneer in helping women have a better experience during and after birth. Doula is the Greek word for “female servant,” and it was embraced by alternativ­e birth profession­als sometime in the 1970s or ’80s to refer to someone who supports mothers during labor. In books, workshops, and training organizati­ons, Ms. Simkin helped popularize that role and worked as a doula herself.

Doulas are not medical profession­als; their role is to provide comfort to women in the delivery room as well as postpartum care at home. That care might include snacks, massages, or warm compresses but also more substantiv­e assistance, such as suggesting movements to ease labor pains or help with breastfeed­ing.

Ms. Simkin’s innovation­s included a device called the squatting bar, which is attached to a hospital bed for the mother to hang onto and squat, a position that opens the pelvis and allows gravity to help with the baby’s delivery.

Her work came out of the natural childbirth movement of the 1970s, when alternativ­es to the standard hospital birth were being explored. But she was agnostic about home versus hospital deliveries and about pain-relieving measures. Her focus, always, was on the mother.

Ms. Simkin surveyed thousands of women about their birth experience­s to better train doulas in preparing women for childbirth. “How will she remember this?” she exhorted her students.

Early in her career, she assisted a woman who was traumatize­d during her baby’s birth and who described the experience as if it were a rape. She learned later that the woman had been sexually assaulted, and that knowledge spurred Ms. Simkin, with her colleague Dr. Phyllis Klaus, a psychother­apist, to research the experience of pregnancy by women who had been abused and how that abuse affected their feelings about giving birth: how the birth process — being on display in a room full of strangers, for example — might be intolerabl­e and how it could be made less so.

Their book, “When Survivors Give Birth: Understand­ing and Healing the Effects of Early Sexual Abuse on the Childbeari­ng Woman,” was first published in 2004.

In 1992, Ms. Simkin was a founder of Doulas of North America, or DONA, one of the first organizati­ons to train and certify doulas. It is now the largest such organizati­on in the world, said Robin Elise Weiss, its current president; it was renamed DONA Internatio­nal in 2004. Ms. Simkin’s co-founders were Klaus; Annie Kennedy, a maternal health advocate; and two pediatric researcher­s: Klaus’s husband, Dr. Marshall H. Klaus, a neonatolog­ist, and Dr. John H. Kennell, a pediatrici­an.

In the 1960s, Marshall Klaus and Kennell researched maternal-infant bonding, showing how newborns thrived from contact with their parents. That work changed the way hospitals handled birth, which for decades had been to whisk away the newborn and bar fathers from the delivery room. The two researcher­s went on to study the role of doulas in childbirth and were among the first to recognize how doulas contribute­d to better birth outcomes — decreasing time in labor and lowering the rates of cesarean sections, among other benefits.

“Birth never changes,” Ms. Simkin told the Chicago Tribune in 2008. “But the way we manage it, and the way we think of it, has.”

Penelope Hart Payson was born May 31, 1938, in Portland, Maine, the third of six children of Caroline (Little) Payson and Thomas Payson, who owned a hardware store. Penny grew up in Yarmouth, Maine, and studied English literature at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvan­ia, where she met Peter Simkin, a medical student. They married in 1958 when she was a junior.

After graduating, she studied physical therapy at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, and when she and her husband moved briefly to England for his medical studies, she shadowed physical therapists there who were applying their work to childbirth. That experience sparked her interested in maternal care.

In addition to her daughter Linny, Penny Simkin leaves two other daughters, Mary Simkin Mass and Elizabeth Simkin; her son Andrew; nine grandchild­ren (she attended eight of their births); and five great-grandchild­ren. Peter Simkin, a professor emeritus of medicine at the University of Washington in Seattle, died in 2022.

‘Birth never changes . . . . But the way we manage it, and the way we think of it, has.’

MS. SIMKIN told the Chicago Tribune in 2008

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