Safeguarding modern midwifery

Midwives On Trial

Analysis, advocacy, and frontline stories for midwives navigating today’s legal landscape.

Why midwives & counsel read

Practice standards briefs

Concise guides that connect CNM/CM standards of care with real liability scenarios so bedside decisions stay defensible.

System risk diagnostics

Analyses of hospital culture, corporate policy shifts, and knowledge gaps that heighten day-to-day legal exposure.

Representation insight

Briefings that give counsel, clinicians, and midwives the context to prosecute or defend CNM/CM cases responsibly.

July 20, 2024

Mid-level Mortification Part 2

Updated January 12, 2026


Modern Challenges in Midwifery

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        “I really hate it when a nurse-practitioner is called a mid-level provider.  Mid-level provider is not a legal or academic term.  It is slang developed to demean or minimize a health professional who is not an MD.  The term “mid-level provider” is aimed at nurse-practitioners (NP’s), as well as physician assistants (PAs), and certified nurse-midwives.  It is insulting to health professionals and to the patients they serve.  Mid-level implies that he or she provides middle-of-the-road or average care.  Who then delivers high-level care?  It must be the MD, of course.  So who delivers the lowest level of care? Nurses?

Patti Brito

Patti Brito

            It is insulting to anyone who has decided to pursue higher education that he or she has finally achieved mid-level competence.  Maybe the term originated from the number of years of training.  I understand that physicians have more years of school than practitioners.  But most of us know that we define ourselves as we begin working on our own and take responsibility for our own decisions.[1]

     Hierarchies of Care      

Vertical hierarchies in obstetrical care feature the physician on top, nurse-midwives/nurse practitioners in the middle, and labor and delivery nurses at the bottom. Instead of promoting a teamwork approach to care, where one provider is not more valuable than another, vertical hierarchies devalue and disregard the contributions of those considered to be in lower tiers. Decisions and plans for care tend to flow in one direction, top-down.  With this dynamic, effective teamwork is nearly impossible, and ultimately, the patient suffers.

Luis Melendez

Luis Melendez

Best care can flourish when all team members are equally involved, and everyone cooperates and contributes within their individual scope of practice

Critical Events Team Training

Visualize a horizontal model where all providers contribute equally.  Optimal care fails when a segment of this model is not allowed to contribute or is missing. Unfortunately, the scope of practice is not well understood between provider specialties. Before engaging in critical events team training, members envisioning a well-functioning/productive team should take time to understand each specialty’s scope of practice; {nursing, labor and delivery} - {nurse-midwifery} - {obstetrics} (these positions on the horizontal model can be shuffled)  Defining and understanding the scopes of practice for each team specialty will take some effort but the information shared can only enhance team functioning Respect and responsibilities will flow side-to-side, and everyone can potentially benefit, particularly the patients.

1.      KevinMD.com. Michael D. Pappas, MD/Physician/July 14, 2014.  http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2014/stop-calling-nurse-practitioners-mid-level-providers

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