New law provides for licensure path of certified professional midwives
in Illinois
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[December 15, 2021]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
Colleen Marotta has delivered hundreds of
babies.
Marotta, 43, of Arlington Heights, became a nurse in 2001. Ten years
later, she became a certified professional midwife, or CPM. When Marotta
was a CPM the law barred her from delivering babies in Illinois, forcing
her to drive to Wisconsin to deliver babies there.
On Tuesday morning, Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill that allows the
certification and licensure of certified professional midwives in
Illinois. The new law sets qualification and educational standards for
CPMs. It is effective on Oct. 1, 2022.
“With the legislation I sign today, the lifesaving and life-giving work
midwives perform will be legally recognized here in Illinois. It’s a
victory decades in the making and one that recognizes the full worth and
value of midwives in reproductive care,” Pritzker said. “Most
importantly, it ensures safe home births for every mother who chooses to
deliver out-of-hospital – another step forward advancing health equity
in communities across our state.”
The 2020 report to the General Assembly by the Illinois Task Force on
Infant and Maternal Mortality Among African Americans stated that the
pregnancy-related mortality rate in Illinois is 23 maternal deaths per
100,000 live births, a severe maternal morbidity rate of 51.4 per 10,000
births, and an infant mortality rate of 6.5 infant deaths per 1,000 live
births. In all of these categories, African American mothers and infants
die or are injured at significantly higher rates than their white
counterparts.
In addition to attending at-home births, CPMs provide supervision,
prenatal and post-natal care and advice to a pregnant woman during a
low-risk pregnancy, labor and post-partum, as well as providing normal
newborn care.
“Although our work is far from done, this is a good step that will
reduce child and maternal mortality in Illinois,” state Rep. Mary E.
Flowers, D-Chicago, said. “This moment is years in the making and I look
forward to continuing to work with the governor and my colleagues in the
General Assembly to improve maternal health outcomes for low-income
women.”
The COVID-19 pandemic has led more expecting mothers to turn to home
births attended by midwives, instead of traditional hospital births,
Marotta said.
“It provides autonomy, choice and support for the mother,” Marotta said.
“As well as having whomever the mother, whomever they want in their
labor space.”
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Colleen Marotta, advance practice nurse and certified
nurse midwife, attends an at-home birth pre-pandemic.Come October 1,
2022, Marotta and other professional midwives will be able to be
certified and licensed in Illinois. Marotta, who works for Midwives
Care, LLC in New Lenox, currently must drive to Wisconsin to deliver
babies. (Photo submitted by Colleen Marotta)
In order to be licensed as a midwife, a candidate must be a certified
professional midwife registered with the North American Registry of
Midwives. In addition, the candidate must complete a midwifery education
program accredited by the Midwife Education and Accreditation Council.
Illinois is the 37th state in the US to recognize certified professional
midwives.
The bill took nine months to “birth,” Rep. Robyn Gabel, D-Evanston,
said.
“Midwives are trained to do home births, but they haven’t been able to
get the certifications they need to do that in this state,” Gabel said.
“Not only will having a formal process for certifying midwives make home
births safer for mothers and babies, but it will also give new and
expecting parents more options at such a critical time in their lives.”
Marotta earned her Master’s degree and went on to become a certified
nurse midwife around 2014 so she could handle more complicated cases and
deliver in Illinois.
Marotta, the mother of four, gave birth to her children at home. She
works for Midwives Care, LLC in New Lenox, a practice that serves rural
and suburban populations. As CPMs become more prevalent, Marotta said
she thinks that more women will choose at-home births.
“I think that there is an empowering feeling that a woman has having
their baby at home,” she said. “This experience and having loved ones
around brings the family closer together because they shared that
experience.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service
covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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