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Monday, April 15, 2024

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CO families must sign up to get $120 per child for food through Summer EBT; No Jurors Picked on First Day of Trump's Manhattan Criminal Trial; virtual ballot goes live to inform Hoosiers; It's National Healthcare Decisions Day.

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Former president Trump's hush money trial begins. Indigenous communities call on the U.N. to shut down a hazardous pipeline. And SCOTUS will hear oral arguments about whether prosecutors overstepped when charging January 6th insurrectionists.

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Housing advocates fear rural low-income folks who live in aging USDA housing could be forced out, small towns are eligible for grants to enhance civic participation, and North Carolina's small and Black-owned farms are helped by new wind and solar revenues.

Certifying Professional Midwives Will Have to Wait Another Year In Iowa

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Monday, April 13, 2009   

Des Moines, IA – Only about one birth in a hundred in Iowa happens at home, but many women who would like the care of a Certified Professional Midwife (CPM) for such a birth have to go to Minnesota, or Wisconsin, or some other state to get access to safe out–of-hospital maternity care from midwives. That's because Iowa is one of the roughly half of the 50 states that doesn't yet license and regulate CPMs.

Monica Brasile with the group Friends of Iowa Midwives says that once again an effort to pass a licensing law in Iowa failed this legislative session. With only 30 of the state's 99 counties having practicing OB/GYNs, Brasile says, licensing CPMs could help increase rural Iowans' access to a high-quality maternity care option.

"It's really in their best interest to have access to health care providers who are specifically trained to attend births outside of the hospital and Certified Professional Midwives are the only health care providers that are specifically trained to attend at home births."

She says some in the medical community are concerned about the safety of at-home births but statistics show that having CPMs in attendance changes everything.

"Home birth is just as safe if not safer than hospital births because the cesarean rates are much lower; women are exposed to much less medical intervention at home."

Brasile says the midwives' model of care is cost effective. For example, she says, Iowa's current rate of cesarean surgeries is a staggering 29.4 percent, twice the rate that the World Health Organization identifies as safe. In contrast, Certified Professional Midwives refer fewer than five percent of mothers for cesarean sections.


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