Albany Times Union

Lawmakers want New York to begin reimbursin­g doulas

High maternal mortality rate in state prompts action

- By Raga Justin

ALBANY— Women giving birth have long had companions gather in the room to offer both emotional and sometimes physical support.

Then came the convention­al health care system. The concept of having a non-clinical supporter during childbirth fell by the wayside, supplanted by sterilized hospital facilities staffed by doctors and nurses.

But as New York, along with the rest of the country, grapples with higher-thanaverag­e maternal mortality rates, state lawmakers are examining how to reintegrat­e doulas — trained profession­als who guide individual­s through the stages of pregnancy and post-pregnancy complicati­ons — within the state’s health care system.

State Sen. Samra Brouk, a Rochester Democrat sponsoring legislatio­n that would task the state Department of Health to set Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates for doulas, said they could provide lifesaving care, pointing to negative experience­s women often experience during their pregnancy.

Brouk will head a hearing scheduled for Tuesday that will look at expanding Medicaid coverage for women who want to hire doulas to assist with their births — currently an inaccessib­le service for low-income people who are enrolled in that system.

“When you think about it, we can’t even get that part right — how to bring life into this world and take care of the birthing person who’s bringing that life into this world,” said Brouk, who used a doula when giving birth to her first child last year. “And it’s a major policy failure and failure of our health care system.”

Negative pregnancy experience­s can range from unnecessar­y and unwanted procedures during birth to postpartum depression and death. Last year, a state Department of Health report found that of 41 pregnancy-related deaths in New York in 2018, embolism, hemorrhagi­ng and mental health conditions were the leading causes.

The U.S. has higher maternal mortality rates compared to other high-income nations, an increasing trend since 2000. There is also an underlying disparity between who suffers from higher maternal mortality rates in New York. Black women are five times more likely to die because of pregnancy-related complicati­ons compared to white women, the Department of Health report found.

Doulas often function as advocates for the people giving birth, said Christine Hernandez, a doula based in Saratoga Springs. Many doulas have amassed years of childbirth experience, making them especially attractive for first-time parents.

But they also fill a void in the days and weeks immediatel­y following a birth, when parents are sent home to adjust to life with a baby and may not be required to check in with a medical provider for up to six weeks.

“We come in on day three, day six — and we have our eyes on people,” Hernandez said. “We’re not medical profession­als, but we’re very well-versed in catching that something might be amiss with someone.”

Increasing­ly, private insurers are recognizin­g their services.

The Albany-based health insurance agency CDPHP recently announced it would offer up to $1,500 in reimbursem­ent for people working with doulas — a fair market rate, according to Hernandez. Blue Cross Blue Shield is considerin­g a similar benefit.

Those on Medicaid, a federal and statefunde­d program that offers medical coverage for low-income New Yorkers, do not have the same access. Yet “families who can’t afford doulas are the ones who often need them the most,” said Betsy Mercoglian­o, co-founder of an Albany-based organizati­on called Birthnet that aims to eliminate inequities in birth outcomes.

Local hospitals, too, are leaning toward embracing doula care. Mercoglian­o, who has been a doula for more than 40 years, said she’s been working with Albany Medical Center to provide a community doula service that would give the hospital a list of doulas to call if someone in labor came to the hospital and “looked like they could really use support.”

Not all medical providers are open to the idea, said Liz Addeo, an Albany-based doula, citing some local clinicians who discourage their patients from bringing doulas along when they give birth. But the hope is that with increased coverage and increased use of services, medical providers will view doulas more as a vital and complement­ary service rather than as intruders.

Doulas also caution that any expansion of Medicaid coverage should be careful in how it mandates regulation of the industry. Doulas sometimes receive no standardiz­ed training, instead piecing together knowledge through apprentice­ships. Some fear that the new legislatio­n would make selftraini­ng redundant and require stricter licensing or some form of higher education — which could present new barriers to becoming one.

The hearing next week will likely include testimony from doulas in the Capital Region who will speak to those concerns and others.

New York still trails other states that have begun offering reimbursem­ent for doula services through Medicaid, according to Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute, Brouk said. She wants the state to include the policy in its budget negotiatio­ns this month.

“Doulas can change your whole experience and they can take it from an experience full of fear and anxiety to one of comfort and joy,” Brouk said. “We deserve to walk into our hospital or birthing center pregnant and to walk out happily and healthy with our newborn.”

 ?? Will Waldron / Times Union ?? Capital Region doulas, Liz Addeo, left, and Christine Hernandez, stand outside the Capitol in Albany. Legislator­s want an expansion of Medicaid to include doulas, birth coaches who provide physical, emotional and informatio­nal support to women during and immediatel­y after pregnancy.
Will Waldron / Times Union Capital Region doulas, Liz Addeo, left, and Christine Hernandez, stand outside the Capitol in Albany. Legislator­s want an expansion of Medicaid to include doulas, birth coaches who provide physical, emotional and informatio­nal support to women during and immediatel­y after pregnancy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States