[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1444 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1444
Acknowledging and thanking America's birth centers for their high
quality and high value model of health care, and expressing support for
the recognition of the week of September 14 through 20, 2024, as
``National Birth Center Week''.
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IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
September 12, 2024
Mrs. Kim of California (for herself and Ms. Kelly of Illinois)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Energy and Commerce
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RESOLUTION
Acknowledging and thanking America's birth centers for their high
quality and high value model of health care, and expressing support for
the recognition of the week of September 14 through 20, 2024, as
``National Birth Center Week''.
Whereas a birth center is a freestanding health care facility where safe,
midwifery-led care supports the processes of birth, newborn, and parent
transition, as well as communitywide wellness;
Whereas birth centers are a key part of the health care system and are guided by
the principles of safety, prevention, patient and family centered care,
sensitivity, appropriate medical intervention, shared decisionmaking,
and cost effectiveness;
Whereas over 400 birth centers across the United States provide patient and
family centered health care that includes a broad range of services such
as wellness exams, prenatal care, childbirth and postpartum care,
newborn exams, STI screenings and treatments, contraceptive care, and
family building services;
Whereas birth centers are based on the midwifery model of care which combines
millennia of childbearing knowledge with modern technology and skills;
Whereas 60 percent of mothers giving birth in the United States meet risk
criteria for birth center care;
Whereas the safety and efficacy of midwifery-led community birth centers have
been repeatedly documented over four decades, and two large-scale
national birth centers' studies published in 1989 and 2013 documented
safe and cost-effective care in birth centers;
Whereas, in 2019, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services-funded, five-
year Strong Start Initiative demonstrated that birth center care
significantly reduces preterm and low-birthweight births and cesarean
section rates, and increases breastfeeding rates and duration for
Medicaid beneficiaries, leading to better health and high value for
childbearing women and infants;
Whereas a 2020 study demonstrated that rural families cared for in birth
centers, including those who transferred to higher levels of care, had
lower incidences of episiotomy, cesarean birth, and induction, and had
higher rates of exclusive breastfeeding, higher average birthweight in
pounds and higher Apgar scores at five minutes;
Whereas the number of families seeking community birth continues to grow, and
according to National Vital Statistics Reports, between 2019 and 2022,
there was a 33.2-percent increase in families opting to give birth in
community settings, including a 51.5-percent increase for Black
families, a 57-percent increase for Native American families, a 51.5-
percent increase for Hispanic families, and a 28-percent increase for
White and Asian families;
Whereas a 2022 research study found that community birth centers, especially
those providing culturally centered care, enhance the experience of
perinatal care for patients and families in rural, minority, and
underserved communities;
Whereas birth centers based on the midwifery model of care are indisputable
solutions to the ongoing crisis in the United States perinatal care
system, a system which ranks poorly in comparison to other high-resource
countries and suffers from multiple disparities in rural, minority, and
underserved communities;
Whereas every person deserves access to a birth center, and the public deserves
to understand the demonstrated effectiveness of freestanding birth
center care that is led by midwives and governed by the midwifery model
of care; and
Whereas, in order to support these efforts, the week of September 14 through 20,
2024, would be appropriate to celebrate midwifery-led community birth,
to create opportunities to grow birth centers and their safe and
effective model of care, and to imagine a world where birth is safe,
sacred, loving, and celebrated in every community: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) acknowledges the safe, high value, family centered care
being provided in America's birth centers;
(2) recognizes National Birth Center Week and encourages
families, communities, health care and public health
professionals, hospitals and health care institutions, health
care insurers, policymakers and regulatory agencies at all
levels of government, and philanthropic leaders to take this
time to learn more about the safety and effectiveness of birth
centers and the midwifery model of care; and
(3) thanks America's birth centers and supports increased
use of the birth center model to expand access to high-quality
care and improve perinatal outcomes for families across the
United States.
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