Safeguarding modern midwifery

About the Site

Centered on CNM/CM best practice and the liability exposures inherent in contemporary clinical work.

About the Author

Why midwives & counsel read

These articles translate CNM/CM standards, legal doctrine, and hospital culture into actionable guidance so clinicians and counsel can navigate modern liability without sacrificing care.

Legal risks in everyday practice

Responsible CNM/CM care and informed legal strategy demand clarity on designations, standards, and how hospital expectations shift from unit to unit.

We outline how negative assumptions, corporate metrics, and knowledge gaps erode public trust and distort courtroom narratives.

Hospital systems & representation

Content focuses on CNM/CM hospital work—where role creep, policy churn, and inconsistent onboarding create hidden exposure.

Attorneys and administrators get primers that distinguish licensure pathways, scope boundaries, and why those differences matter in discovery.

Who this serves

  • CNMs/CMs reconciling bedside realities with evolving standards of care.
  • Hospital leaders repairing cultures of care and aligning policy with safe practice.
  • Attorneys, risk teams, and patients who need a grounded view of each midwifery designation.

October 15, 2024

Certified Nurse-Midwife/Certified Midwife Homebirth Practice

Updated November 5, 2025

Olivia Anne Snyder                             Unsplash Image
Photo by Olivia Anne Snyder on Unsplash

CNM Homebirth Practice

Currently, in the U.S., the majority of home-birth attendants are Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs). (See Diversified Midwifery Practice in the United States ,posted on 6/18/24) In nearly every State, Certified Nurse-Midwives and Certified Midwives are licensed to attend home deliveries, if that is their preference. The nature and structure of these homebirth practices do depend on collaborating relationships with cooperating OB/GYN physicians and hospital CNM practices willing to accept care of patients on a referral basis. Hospital CNM practices frequently accept transfers from homebirth CNMs when the transfer is for non-emergent reasons such as labor induction, augmentation, or continuous fetal monitoring.

One of the major issues constraining the practice of CNMs in home settings is acquiring affordable malpractice insurance coverage. Some insurance companies impose surcharges on physicians who work with midwives in hospital settings. It is not a stretch to imagine that insurance companies may charge a CNM high rates to cover a homebirth practice. According to one ACNM survey of marketplace insurers, 56% refuse to cover home birth services provided by CNMs.1

CNM Homebirth Requirements and Considerations For Practice

Homebirth requirements for CNMs include physician/CNM collaborative agreements, practice guidelines, and referral/emergency planning similar to every other setting where a CNM may practice. Homebirth CNMs do not practice under any assumptions that this setting necessitates a lower standard of practice. Standards of care for delivery in a home environment are outlined by the ACNM Standards of Practice, Ethics, Core Competencies, State regulations, and evidence-based decision making, establishing the foundation of CNM practice in all settings.To comply with CNM standards of practice for home delivery, there must include a specific emergency plan which outlines the course of action in the event of complications during labor and delivery in a home setting. Contingency plans will include mode of emergency transfer (e.g. ambulance or car), an available collaborating physician/midwife, a cooperating receiving hospital, and other necessary arrangements specific to locale (city or rural).

Carlo Navarro                                               unsplsh image
Photo by Carlo Navarro unsplsh on Unsplash

As with every birth environment, full disclosure and informed consent must be undertaken for the patient and her support person. Information should include not only the benefits of the birth setting, but also the limitations. Patients, partners and families must be aware of what can and cannot be accomplished in any particular birth setting along with full understanding of emergency plans in the event of complications.

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1 Ensuring Access to High Value Providers. ACNM Survey of Marketplace Insurers Regarding Coverage of Midwifery Services. Sept 2014.

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