Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because I know this will come up, not all people who call themselves midwives are Certified Nurse Midwives.
A midwife who practices in a hospital in always a CNM--they are licensed RNs with additional graduate-level education specifically in midwifery and women's health.
Some birth center midwives are all CNMs. I believe all the Birthcare midwives are. The midwives at the center I used (not in DC, and sadly since shut down) only had CNMs.
Occasionally, CNMs, like the ones at Birthcare, will also do homebirths. Home births are where you will run into people calling themselves midwives when they have little to no education.
As an aside: is anyone else bothered that a medical professional, albeit outside of their specialty, doesn't understand the role of a midwife?
I.suspect OP misunderstood what her friend was trying to say. No offence, OP but it is confusing when you don't have a background. People get things Drs say twisted all the time.
And honestly- its not an either/or with MDs and midwives. My midwife consulted with the OB on my case. It's a team effort.
Anonymous wrote:Because I know this will come up, not all people who call themselves midwives are Certified Nurse Midwives.
A midwife who practices in a hospital in always a CNM--they are licensed RNs with additional graduate-level education specifically in midwifery and women's health.
Some birth center midwives are all CNMs. I believe all the Birthcare midwives are. The midwives at the center I used (not in DC, and sadly since shut down) only had CNMs.
Occasionally, CNMs, like the ones at Birthcare, will also do homebirths. Home births are where you will run into people calling themselves midwives when they have little to no education.
As an aside: is anyone else bothered that a medical professional, albeit outside of their specialty, doesn't understand the role of a midwife?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure your friend did not recommend a doula? I think a midwife plus an OB would be pretty unusual.
My two cents is that, if you have a good OB and a good partner, you don't need a doula. If you have doubts about either, though, a doula might be helpful. If you do get a doula, do not be cheap about it; find one with tons of experience and excellent references.
Helpful, thank you! So, midwives and OBs are seen as either/or?
Yes, Either an OBGYN or a midwife delivers your baby. One or the other.
Since midwives cannot perform C-sections, if you need a C Section, you will be moved over to the care of the OBGYN, essentially.
I was in the care of midwives for my entire pregnancy. Even when it became clear I would need a c-section (breech) I continued to see them. While the actual procedure was performed by an OB, the midwife explained everything to me in the OR and held my hands during epidural before DH was allowed in. I had a very positive experience with this model of care and recommend it.
Are you in the DC area? which practice did you use?