CPOY

Award of Excellence: Keeping Care Close: Midwives treat the growing maternal health desert in Iowa

In August 2023, the national nonprofit organization March of Dimes — dedicated to improving the health of mothers and babies in the U.S. — released a report designating a third of Iowa’s counties as maternity care deserts, meaning they have no obstetrics and gynecology services or birthing hospitals.

Between 2020-21, eight Iowa hospitals saw the closure of their labor and delivery units, and 40 more were at risk of total closure in 2022 due to low or non-existent financial reserves and a negative financial margin over three years.

According to March of Dimes, the farther a woman travels to receive maternity care, the higher the risk of maternal morbidity and poor outcomes for infants. In Iowa, 14 percent of women live more than 30 minutes from a birthing hospital compared to the U.S. average of 9.7 percent.

One way this care disparity is being combatted is by midwives. A licensed Certified Nurse Midwife can provide care for clients from puberty through menopause. Care can include, but is not limited to, annual physicals, preconception and contraception education, and birth.

Megan Swanson, a first-time mother in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, gave birth to her first child in her and her husband James’ home in September. Moira Weitz and Allie Kubik, Midwives with Rooted In Love Midwifery, served as Swanson’s midwives and provided care for her throughout pregnancy, delivery, and postpartum.

Swanson said after meeting with Weitz and Kubik for the first time that she put all of her trust into them, “They were my main care providers, and then they would refer me elsewhere if I needed an ultrasound or lab work done or anything like that,” Swanson said. She said along with relying on her midwives for clinical care, she formed a strong emotional bond with them, “They cared about me as a whole person. So I felt really close to my midwives,” she said, “I just felt like the birth experience was so empowering. And I would do it all over again in a heartbeat,”

Caption
Slide 1 of 10
Untitled
September 21, 2023

Moira Weitz and Allie Kubik, Certified Nurse Midwives and owners of Rooted in Love Midwifery help Megan Swanson deliver her first baby in her home in Cedar Rapids, Iowa on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023. Swanson said her home birth experience was empowering and she would do it again in a heartbeat, “I trusted them with my care and knew that they would do what was best for me,” she said. Weitz has been a practicing midwife for 19 years serving people in and around Cedar Rapids. Her practice, Rooted in Love Midwifery, previously served a 40-mile radius but has moved toward a tighter margin in recent years as demand has grown. Keeping Care Close: Midwives treat the growing maternal health desert in Iowa In August 2023, the national nonprofit organization March of Dimes — dedicated to improving the health of mothers and babies in the U.S. — released a report designating a third of Iowa’s counties as maternity care deserts, meaning they have no obstetrics and gynecology services or birthing hospitals. Between 2020-21, eight Iowa hospitals saw the closure of their labor and delivery units, and 40 more were at risk of total closure in 2022 due to low or non-existent financial reserves and a negative financial margin over three years. According to March of Dimes, the farther a woman travels to receive maternity care, the higher the risk of maternal morbidity and poor outcomes for infants. In Iowa, 14 percent of women live more than 30 minutes from a birthing hospital compared to the U.S. average of 9.7 percent. One way this care disparity is being combatted is by midwives. A licensed Certified Nurse Midwife can provide care for clients from puberty through menopause. Care can include, but is not limited to, annual physicals, preconception and contraception education, and birth. Megan Swanson, a first time mother in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, gave birth to her first child in her and her husband James’ home in September. Moira Weitz and Allie Kubik, Midwives with Rooted In Love Midwifey, served as Swanson’s midwives and provided care for her throughout pregnancy, delivery, and postpartum. Swanson said after meeting with Weitz and Kubik for the first time that she put all of her trust into them, “They were my main care providers, and then they would refer me elsewhere if I needed an ultrasound or lab work done or anything like that,” Swanson said. She said along from relying on her midwives for clinical care, she formed a strong emotional bond with them, “They cared about me as a whole person. So I felt really close to my midwives,” she said, “I just felt like the birth experience was so empowering. And I would do it all over again in a heartbeat,”

Emily Nyberg / University of Iowa
Location
Related
    b111117c-c6c8-4218-a192-32d8ff1a61fc
    bb8f0d59-3b71-4e25-9e76-e21ee680ac3a
    72957680-01d5-470b-bbe6-2f3a15a09ba1
    67118aa3-5539-4f52-bee3-2f0c16e6fbfe
    20f4d6d9-eb3e-47d2-90c2-c93254baf183
    c496173a-c7e7-41f9-b736-ebdb6be3de27
    c7192317-0160-4f15-8ed0-c1e5f7f24ff0
    faf6d593-c096-4804-ac70-1d35fe68a9c4
    5f3ce6a6-fce2-4436-b13e-496978af91a0
    d7000cd0-5330-438d-bc19-b3f5da5e3439
    See more at cpoy.org