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PACEs Connection for Birth Workers

Covid-19

Providing in a Pandemic: The Challenges of Rural Maternity Care Just Got More Difficult (Daily Yonder)

By Mikhal Ben Joseph, June 24, 2020, Daily Yonder. Rural moms already faced a host of obstacles to get good prenatal care. Rural nurse midwives and doulas are trying to fill the gap . (Part of a series.) Mothers all over the country faced new hurdles when Covid-19 turned birth plans upside down: fathers not allowed to attend prenatal care visits, temporary closure of health clinics and OB/GYN offices, concerns over mother-to-baby transmission of the disease. In rural America, it made the...

Everything About the Coronavirus-Fueled Home Birth Trend Ignores the Realities for Black Women (Mother Jones)

Becca Andrews, June 15, 2020, Mother Jones “The solutions are within our communities, and people need to trust Black women, listen to Black women, and invest in Black women.” As a low-income, Black mother of seven, Laurie Bertram Roberts has limited faith in the medical establishment. So do her children. Back in March, when her middle daughter Kayla’s due date was inching closer amid a global pandemic, they made a decision: Kayla would deliver her baby at home. It wasn’t just one thing that...

The birth of a coronavirus carrier's baby in Australia was different, for all the right reasons (The Sydney Morning Herald)

By Aisha Dow, April 27, 2020, The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian doctors who delivered a coronavirus carrier's baby say they have achieved what could be a world first – by keeping an infected mother together with her newborn. Overseas, infants and mothers with the disease have been physically separated for 14 days after a scheduled caesarean section and prevented from breastfeeding. But when a 31-year-old woman with coronavirus gave birth at the Gold Coast University Hospital last month,...

Association Between Mode of Delivery Among Pregnant Women With COVID-19 and Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes in Spain (JAMA)

JAMA. Published online June 8, 2020. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.10125 Data from China found severe complications in 8% of pregnant women with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). 1 However, the high rate of cesarean deliveries (>90%) in Chinese reports is concerning, 2 and whether mode of delivery is associated with maternal complications or neonatal transmission is unknown. 3 We assessed births to women with COVID-19 by mode of delivery. Methods Women with singleton pregnancies and a positive...

New ROOTS, Beyond Medicalization: Midwives and Maternity Care in America (Jewish Healthcare Foundation)

By Alyce Palko, April 30, 2020, Jewish Healthcare Foundation. Introducing the Jewish Healthcare Foundation's new ROOTS publication, Beyond Medicalization: Midwives and Maternity Care in America . Under the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic, the world is rapidly moving into a new era of healthcare delivery. Across the country, maternal healthcare policies are changing daily in order to ensure birthing families have access to safe care. Hospitals are making rapid decisions about whether birthing...

Fearing Coronavirus, Many Rural Black Women Avoid Hospitals to Give Birth at Home (PEW TRUST)

By April Simpson, April 18, 2020, PEW Trust Black women are two to three times more likely to die from causes related to pregnancy than white women, regardless of income or education. Black midwives could be part of the solution, especially during the coronavirus pandemic, but restrictions on midwifery make it difficult to practice in many states. Pregnant women in Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi have been calling nonstop to CHOICES Midwifery Practice in Memphis, but the center is...

Doulas & Covid-19: A toolkit for doulas (DONA International)

Please the attached toolkit for more information. From the toolkit: Best practices when working with clients Given how new this virus is, we currently have very little data on how it might affect pregnant people and newborns. Guidelines from the CDC outline recommendations for how to support pregnant and laboring people with Coronavirus. (3) There is currently no evidence that the virus is spread from mother to baby in utero, or that it is transmitted in human milk. (4)

A Chaotic Week for Pregnant Women in New York City (The New Yorker)

By Emily Bobrow, April 1, 2020, for The New Yorker Early on Sunday, March 22nd, Lauren Pelz got a text from a friend who’d heard that the NewYork-Presbyterian (N.Y.P.) hospital network had decided to bar partners from accompanying women in labor, due to concerns about the spread of covid -19 . It was the day before Pelz was scheduled to be induced to deliver her second child at N.Y.P. Lower Manhattan Hospital. She searched the hospital’s Web site and Twitter feed for news about the change in...

 
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