Resource

Research Your Midwife

The information mothers should have is mostly already public — it just sits in places nobody tells you to look.

Explore the public databases for the midwives and birth centers in your state. (Records last verified by the Foundation in 2018; if you find a broken or outdated link, please tell us.)

A 5-step verification checklist

  1. License verification. Look up your midwife by name and license number on your state Department of Health's license-verification site. Note whether the license is active, lapsed, or restricted.
  2. Disciplinary actions. Search the same site for any "Emergency Restriction Order," "Emergency Suspension Order," or formal disciplinary action. A general Google search of the midwife's name plus those phrases is often faster than the official site.
  3. Hospital admitting privileges. If your midwife claims admitting privileges at a particular hospital, call that hospital and verify directly. Privileges are not automatically transferred between hospitals and they expire.
  4. Malpractice insurance. Ask in writing whether your midwife carries malpractice insurance, and which carrier and policy limit. Note: many out-of-hospital midwives do not carry it.
  5. Realistic transfer time. From the birthing center or home address, time the drive to the nearest hospital at the hour you would actually deliver, accounting for ambulance call-out and loading time.

State midwifery boards

Each state regulates midwifery differently. Below are the verification sites we've collected; if your state is missing, contribute via the contact form.

Where to go from here