Safeguarding modern midwifery

About the Author

Uniting clinical expertise and legal perspective to reveal how midwifery is interpreted—and often misinterpreted—across courts and hospitals.

Martha E Merrill-Hall portrait
Martha E Merrill-Hall JD MS CNM

Martha has led CNM practice across private, Indian Health Service, hospitalist, and critical access settings while litigating personal injury and professional malpractice cases.

Today she researches verdict trends, policy shifts, and licensure actions from the Rocky Mountains—equipping midwives, patients, and counsel with grounded legal insight.

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Why midwives & counsel read

Dual license perspective

Decades of private, IHS, hospitalist, and critical access CNM practice pair with JD work representing both plaintiffs and defendants in professional malpractice.

  • Pro bono defense of advanced practice providers facing board actions.
  • Expert witness experience in midwifery negligence claims.

Where I've practiced

Licensed across Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, Iowa, New Mexico, California, and beyond—spanning CNM hospitalist teams, Indian Health Service care, and cardiology/critical care nursing roots in Vermont and Maine.

Today I research verdicts, legal seminars, and policy shifts from the Rocky Mountains.

What Martha hopes readers gain

  • Historical context for how CNMs/CMs secured hospital privileges and where culture still lags clinical reality.
  • Plain-language breakdowns of licensure boundaries, malpractice myths, and courtroom expectations.
  • Validation for midwives, attorneys, and patients who need equitable framing of the profession’s contributions.
  • Strategies to translate courtroom narratives back into safe bedside practice.

Articles

The Reference Desk

Legal insight, real-world lessons, and grounded guidance for everyone involved in CNM/CM practice.

Filing the Medical Negligence Lawsuit - Part 1 preview image
Photo on Unsplash
Sep 03, 2024

Filing the Medical Negligence Lawsuit - Part 1

The court filing of a claim for medical negligence normally occurs after hours and weeks of law firm research, review, and preparation. Initially, a potential plaintiff, or injured party, will contact a law office to discuss whether or not they may have a viable claim.  With personal injury, initial contact from an injured party will typically be fielded by a legal assistant or paralegal with experience evaluating the merits of a potential case.  He or she will interview the caller, take notes, and ask pertinent questions regarding the circumstances of the injury. Essential information will also be noted regarding ongoing health issues that have persisted since the purported negligent event.

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ACNM Core Competencies for Basic Midwifery Practice preview image
Aug 15, 2024

ACNM Core Competencies for Basic Midwifery Practice

The Core Competencies for Basic Midwifery Practice include the fundamental knowledge, skills, and abilities expected of new midwives certified by the American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB). They serve as guidelines for educators, students, health care professionals, consumers, employers, and policymakers. The Core Competencies constitute the basic requisites for graduates of all midwifery education programs pre-accredited or accredited by the Accreditation Commission for Midwifery Education (ACME). They are inclusive of the hallmarks of midwifery practice.

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Obstetrics Consultations and Midwifery Liability preview image
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Aug 13, 2024

Obstetrics Consultations and Midwifery Liability

Campaigns against midwifery, starting at the beginning of the 19th century, set the table for strained relationships between physicians and midwives, persisting to the present time. Anti-midwifery sentiments, enhanced by the attitudes of J. Whitridge Williams (1912) and Joseph Bolivar DeLee (1915)*, ushered in an age of obstetrics and scientific medicine which were considered the only modern and realistic choice for safe and healthy childbirth in America.

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Legal Standard of Care, Part 2 preview image
Aug 10, 2024

Legal Standard of Care, Part 2

Another example of legislative language describing standard of care can be defined as the “degree of care and skill of the average CNM, taking into account the medical/midwifery knowledge available to her based on customary practices of the average CNM”. It is obvious that statutory legal terms exist to be argued about in court. A CNM provider will never hear this language in any graduate school midwifery classroom. Certified Nurse-Midwives do not acquire knowledge of the science, skills, ethics, and competencies of midwifery based on legislative standards. “Available knowledge” for a CNM/CM will be based on her education from an accredited midwifery education program.

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Elements of Negligence preview image
Jul 25, 2024

Elements of Negligence

To be negligent is to act or fail to act in a way that causes injury to another person. Accidents happen, but what separates an unintentional accident from a negligent act is the standard of care. By neglecting the applicable and proper standard of care pertaining to a particular incident, an individual may be found liable for any resulting injuries. Negligence is a legal theory in civil law. The concept of negligence is closely related to determination of standard of care. Medical malpractice is considered a specific entity within the domain of negligence.

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Legal Foundations For Certified Nurse-Midwifery Practice preview image
Jul 23, 2024

Legal Foundations For Certified Nurse-Midwifery Practice

CNMs and CMs must demonstrate compliance with the Core Competencies for Basic Midwifery Practice of the ACNM upon completion of their midwifery education programs and must practice according to the ACNM Standards for the Practice of Nurse-Midwifery. The Core Competencies define baseline midwifery practice; the collection of skills which every Certified Nurse-Midwife must have. American College of Nurse-Midwife competencies and standards are consistent with or exceed the global competencies and standards for the practice of midwifery as defined by the International Confederation of Midwives. To maintain the designation of CNM or CM, midwives must be recertified every five years through the American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB) and must also meet specific continuing education requirements.[1]

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Mid-level Mortification Part 2 preview image
Jul 20, 2024

Mid-level Mortification Part 2

“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 (PA’s), and certified nurse-midwives.  It is insulting to health professionals as well as to the patients that 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?

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Graduate Level Midwifery Education preview image
Jun 27, 2024

Graduate Level Midwifery Education

Along with other misconceptions regarding nurse-midwifery practice, is the idea the CNMs/CMs are inadequately educated when compared with physicians. Historically, in the medical world and with the medicalization of normal women experiencing normal childbirth, anything short of a traditional medical school education was considered inferior. As previously mentioned, certified nurse-midwifery education has not been designed to confer skills specific to a medical model of care, although there is expected overlap between models for certain aspects of care.

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