Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Expert: Midwives may reduce maternal deaths

- By Elizabeth Heubeck

The Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center in Danbury is a 50- minute drive from Evelyn DeGraf’s home in Westcheste­r, N. Y. Pregnant with her second child, the 37- year- old didn’t hesitate to make the drive — she wanted her birth to be

attended by a midwife, not a doctor.

DeGraf believed midwifery care to be more personal and less rushed than that delivered by obstetrics/ gynecologi­sts. She knew an OB/ GYN would deem her relatively advanced maternal age and previous Cesarean section history too high- risk to attempt a vaginal birth after cesarean section.

But she had to drive roughly 35 miles to find a midwife because there aren’t many of them.

Despite the fact that an estimated 85 percent of women are appropriat­e for midwife care, midwives attend about 11 percent of births in Connecticu­t, said Holly Kennedy, professor of midwifery at Yale School of Nursing. Kennedy sees a direct correlatio­n between lower use of midwives and higher maternal mortality.

“If you scaled up midwives, you would avert over 80 percent of maternal deaths,” Kennedy said. In Connecticu­t, there are 211 licensed nurse- midwives, compared to 945 licensed OB/ GYNs, according to state Department of Health records. Unlike some other states, which employ midwives who do not require nursing degrees, Connecticu­t recognizes only nurse- midwives, who hold advanced degrees in nursing and additional training in midwifery.

The United States has the highest rate of pregnancy- or childbirth- related deaths in the developed world. According to United Health Foundation, in 2018 the maternal mortality rate for the country is 20.7 deaths per 100,000 births from any cause related to or aggravated by pregnancy, excluding accidents. In Connecticu­t, the maternal mortality rate is 13.2.

Also, in Connecticu­t and nationwide, black women and their infants suffer disproport­ionately worse pregnancy- related health outcomes than white women.

Babies born to black women are more than twice as likely to die in the first year of life than babies born to white women, and black women are 243 percent more like- ly than white women to die from pregnancy- related complicati­ons, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

DeGraf’s second child was born vaginally at Danbury Hospital, assisted by a nurse- midwife employed by the Connecticu­t Childbirth Center. Her low- interventi­on delivery is common of births attended by midwives who, statistica­lly, use fewer interventi­ons than physicians during labor and delivery.

Cesarean sections, considered major surgery, carry well- establishe­d risks — higher rates of hemorrhage, transfusio­ns, infections, and blood clots. All of these are primary causes of maternal mortality, whose rates increased nationwide ( with the exception of California) by 26.6 percent between 2010 and 2014, according to a study supported by The National Center for Biotech- nology Informatio­n.

Midwives are linked to higher rates of physiologi­c birth and fewer adverse neonatal outcomes, according to a nationwide 2018 study, which ranked states by how well midwives are integrated into regional health care systems. Connecticu­t fell into the bottom third. Experts say the low ranking is due in large part to a lack of access to midwives. Many wouldbe nurse- midwives never get the chance to train for the position in Connecticu­t.

“At Yale, I get at least 100 applicants for our ( nurse- midwife) program. Most are highly qualified, but I can only accept 25 percent,” said Kennedy, an author of the 2018 study. She said most federal health education dollars are directed to schools of medicine, thereby limiting resources for midwifery education, including the ability to reimburse pre- ceptors who oversee clinical training of nurse- midwife students.

Those who do find spots in one of Connecticu­t’s two nurse- midwife programs ( Fairfield University offers a doctor of nursing practice in midwifery) may confront challenges to practicing upon graduation. Many face high debt hurdles, Kennedy says, and search the country for employers willing to repay their student loans. Those who do find jobs in Connecticu­t may be stymied from practicing to the fullest extent possible.

Cathy Parisi is director of the Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center, the state’s only freestandi­ng birth center. She said while Connecticu­t legislatio­n authorizes its nurse- midwives to practice to “full scope care,” which includes admitting privileges at hospitals that credential nursemidwi­ves, not all hospital bylaws reflect current state statutes; therefore, some hospitals in Connecticu­t do not grant admitting privileges.

“Little things like that are terribly irritating,” said Parisi, who suggested several possible reasons why hospitals wouldn’t allow a nurse- midwife to practice within the full scope of her license, including pressure from physicians, medical staff or the hospital legal department or, simply, resistance to change.

Nurse- midwives follow the same standards of care as OB/ GYNs, but the difference in how they deliver care has an increasing number of women gravitatin­g to the midwifery model. The Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center, which at its inception about 25 years ago delivered five or six births per month, now facilitate­s up to 35 per month and has increased its staff accordingl­y, from two to five full- time nursemidwi­ves.

With rare exceptions, all insurances cover midwifery services, including HUSKY/ Medicaid, though some plans reimburse midwifery services at 90 percent of the physician rate, said Stephanie Welsh, vice president of the American College of Nurse- Midwives’ Connecticu­t affiliate.

While the cost to patients is typically the same whether they use a nurse- midwife or an OB/ GYN, they may feel like they’re getting a better deal with a nursemidwi­fe.

“By seeing only two to three patients an hour, a midwife has time to spend with her client. Physicians simply do not have the time in their schedules to accommodat­e such lengthy visits for a low- risk woman,” Parisi said.

By contrast, their midwife practice schedules only two to three patients per hour.

“Midwifery is a relationsh­ipbased profession. One of the reasons we probably do have better outcomes is because we listen to women,” Yale’s Kennedy said.

 ?? Melanie Stengel / For Conn. Health I- Team ?? Lindsay Lachant, right, measures the abdomen of Caitlin DePasquale, of Norwalk, at the Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center in Danbury.
Melanie Stengel / For Conn. Health I- Team Lindsay Lachant, right, measures the abdomen of Caitlin DePasquale, of Norwalk, at the Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center in Danbury.
 ?? Melanie Stengel / Conn Health I- Team ?? Caroline Dicolla, of Ridgefield, left, has help bundling her infant daughter, Kohana Domejczyk, from certified nurse midwife Cathy Parisi at the Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center in Danbury.
Melanie Stengel / Conn Health I- Team Caroline Dicolla, of Ridgefield, left, has help bundling her infant daughter, Kohana Domejczyk, from certified nurse midwife Cathy Parisi at the Connecticu­t Childbirth & Women’s Center in Danbury.

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