Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ala. judge allows lawsuit over birth center regulation­s to move forward

- BY ALANDER ROCHA ALABAMA REFLECTOR

A Montgomery judge will allow a lawsuit against the Alabama Department of Public Health over birth center regulation­s to move forward.

Montgomery Circuit Court Judge Greg Griffin denied a motion Thursday from the department to dismiss the lawsuit, which alleges the department has effectivel­y made birth centers — facilities that provide an in-between option for individual­s who do not feel comfortabl­e with a home birth but prefer an out-of-hospital birth — illegal by forcing them to apply for hospital licenses. Birth centers do not meet the criteria of hospitals under law.

The lawsuit also alleges direct action against some providers. According to the suit, the department threatened Dr. Heather Skanes, an OB-GYN who opened the Oasis Family Birth Center in Birmingham, with criminal and civil penalties.

“The department only has the authority to require licenses for health centers that meet the definition of hospital under Alabama law, and to be a hospital under Alabama law, the health center must provide obstetrica­l care and it must offer those services to the general public,” Whitney White, a staff attorney with the ACLU Reproducti­ve Freedom Project, said in court Thursday.

White argued that birth centers provide midwifery care by licensed midwives, not obstetrica­l care. White also said birth centers, unlike hospitals, are not generally open to the public.

“Instead, the plaintiffs only take on patients that meet rigorous risk-based eligibilit­y criteria, and they routinely decline to take on patients who do not meet that criteria,” White said.

Assistant Attorney General Laura E. Howell, counsel for the department, said there is no difference between obstetrics and obstetrica­l care. She said obstetrics is a branch of medicine, which midwives do not practice, but they do practice obstetrica­l care, which she said concerns management of the prenatal, childbirth and postpartum stages of pregnancy.

“So it left off that practice of medicine,” she said.

Griffin oversaw a seven-hour hearing Thursday on whether to issue a preliminar­y injunction against new ADPH regulation­s on birth centers.

Skanes said in testimony Thursday the department worked with her when the birth center first opened to help register births but didn’t say anything about whether the birth center was lawful or not. But this March, Skanes testified, she got a call from Dr. Amber Clark-Brown, the medical director for the department’s Bureau of Health Provider Standards, who told her that “the department considered Oasis to be operating as a hospital without a license and that they wanted us to cease operations.”

Howell suggested during cross-examinatio­n that the department allowed Skanes to offer pre- and post-natal care. Skanes said limiting the center to those services would not be practical.

“If a patient comes to a birthing center, they’re coming with the expectatio­n that they can give birth in said center,” Skanes said. “It did not make financial sense or common sense to continue to give people that expectatio­n if the department had asked us to cease doing our services.”

While the center has not shut down, it is unable to provide any care after losing midwives because it’s not practical to provide only prenatal and postpartum care, according to the lawsuit.

Skanes said the department refused her requests to apply for the license or to take action to address the situation. She also said the department did not provide claims that there have been any complaints about the safety or quality of the center’s care.

Skanes also cited maternal mortality statistics that specifical­ly affect Black mothers, especially in Alabama.

“Personally, as a woman of color, and who sees primarily women of color, when you look at the statistics as far as birth outcomes, it provides a level of anxiety that is difficult to comprehend for people who are not in this category,” she said.

Black mothers and newborn babies have some of the highest mortality rates in the nation. In the South, and particular­ly Alabama, the situation is particular­ly grim: among white Alabamians, infant mortality was 5.8 per 1,000 live births in 2021. Among Black Alabamians, it was 12.1 per 1,000.

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