Marin Independent Journal

Make child birth safer in California

California has a child birth crisis. On Feb. 15, California State Auditor Grant Parks released a review of the state's Comprehens­ive Perinatal Services Program, which helps reduce the percentage of babies born with low birth weights.

- Written by the Southern California News Group editorial board.

Weights under 5 pounds 8 ounces are considered too low. The audit found the percentage of such births jumped from 6.7% in 2014 to 7.3% in 2021, affecting about 30,000 infants.

It found neither the department­s of Health Care Services nor Public Health provided “the perinatal program with sufficient oversight.” Both department­s — these are large bureaucrac­ies — are in the Health and Human Services Agency, whose secretary, Mark Ghaly, was appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Specifical­ly, in 2022 just 45 of the 2,600 reviews of providers even ran assessment­s of perinatal programs — 1.7%. Of 61 state health jurisdicti­ons, 22 didn't even complete reviews.

The audit recommende­d the Legislatur­e pass a law giving primary responsibi­lity entirely to Health Care Services and direct it to “develop a system of oversight.” This seems essential.

Also this week, CalMatters reported on a midwife, Madeleine Wisner, who got so fed up with the red tape and expense of helping mothers give birth outside hospitals she moved to New Zealand.

Of her price of $8,500 for a birth, only $1,451 was reimbursed by Medi-Cal, which funds about 40% of all births. By contrast, according to the data firm Fair Health, the full cost of a regular birth in California can be up to $36,000. (A C-section can be $50,000, but of course is performed in a hospital.) Thus, enabling more midwife births would reduce overall costs for both Medi-Cal and for private insurance companies.

A Feb. 12 report from the Osher Center for Integrativ­e Health at University of California, San Francisco pointed out certified nurse-midwives are the only type who can work in hospital maternity wards; while both they and licensed midwives can help at free-standing birth centers or home births. The study cited seven main barriers to midwives signing up to be MediCal providers and getting reimbursem­ent. These included malpractic­e insurance costing at least $11,000 a year for midwives and up to $80,000 for centers. And the Medi-Cal applicatio­n process doesn't align with California licensing guidelines.

There is some good news. Last year the Legislatur­e unanimousl­y passed in both houses Senate Bill 667 by state Sen.

Bill Dodd, D-Napa. At the time the bill was introduced, he explained, “This bill removes unnecessar­y barriers and supervisio­n rules for nurse-midwifery practice.” Dodd's office told us it's too early to assess the bill's effectiven­ess, but it is being monitored.

Newsom should take charge of this by pushing through the Legislatur­e the auditor's reform consolidat­ion and monitoring suggestion­s, while working to remove the seven barriers to midwives listed by the Osher Center.

Enabling more midwives also would save Medi-Cal money during this time of budget deficits. Having a baby ought to be a joyous time, not one spent worrying about finding a midwife or paying a large co-payment.

The system needs a wakeup call.

Having a baby ought to be a joyous time, not one spent worrying about finding a midwife.

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