The birth center model of care: Staffing, business characteristics, and core clinical outcomes

Author:

Jolles Diana R.12ORCID,Niemczyk Nancy3ORCID,Hoehn Velasco Lauren4,Wallace Jacqueline1,Wright Jennifer1,Stapleton Susan1,Flynn Cynthia1,Pelletier‐Butler Paula1,Versace Autumn5,Marcelle Ebony6,Thornton Patrick7,Bauer Kate1

Affiliation:

1. American Association of Birth Centers Perkiomenville Pennsylvania USA

2. Clinical Faculty Frontier Nursing University Hyden Kentucky USA

3. Nurse‐Midwife Program University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

4. Department of Economics Georgia State University Atlanta Georgia USA

5. Dartmouth Hitchcock Lebanon New Hampshire USA

6. Community of Hope Washington District of Columbia USA

7. University of Illinois Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesInterest in expanding access to the birth center model is growing. The purpose of this research is to describe birth center staffing models and business characteristics and explore relationships to perinatal outcomes.MethodsThis descriptive analysis includes a convenience sample of all 84 birth center sites that participated in the AABC Site Survey and AABC Perinatal Data Registry between 2012 and 2020. Selected independent variables include staffing model (CNM/CM or CPM/LM), legal entity status, birth volume/year, and hours of midwifery call/week. Perinatal outcomes include rates of induction of labor, cesarean birth, exclusive breastfeeding, birthweight in pounds, low APGAR scores, and neonatal intensive care admission.ResultsThe birth center model of care is demonstrated to be safe and effective, across a variety of staffing and business models. Outcomes for both CNM/CM and CPM/LM models of care exceed national benchmarks for perinatal quality with low induction, cesarean, NICU admission, and high rates of breastfeeding. Within the sample of medically low‐risk multiparas, variations in clinical outcomes were correlated with business characteristics of the birth center, specifically annual birth volume. Increased induction of labor and cesarean birth, with decreased success breastfeeding, were present within practices characterized as high volume (>200 births/year). The research demonstrates decreased access to the birth center model of care for Black and Hispanic populations.Conclusions for PracticeBetween 2012 and 2020, 84 birth centers across the United States engaged in 90,580 episodes of perinatal care. Continued policy development is necessary to provide risk‐appropriate care for populations of healthy, medically low‐risk consumers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

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