Abstract
Doulas are community perinatal professionals trained in pregnancy health, childbirth preparation, labor support, lactation counseling, and postnatal care. Doulas serve as patient advocates and provide laboring patients with continuous one-to-one support including informational, physical, and emotional support. Research shows that access to continuous labor support contributes to positive health outcomes such as increasing rates of spontaneous vaginal delivery, shorter labor, less need for analgesics, and increased satisfaction with the birthing process. However, despite their benefits, socioeconomic, structural, and systemic factors limit doula accessibility and manifest in low utilization among patients who could benefit from doulas the most. Given the positive health implications of doula support and the need for these services in underserved populations, there is an urgency to increase the accessibility of doulas. Several health centers in the United States have created successful doula programs to meet the needs of their patient populations. To better understand these programs, we interviewed and collaborated on this paper with program representatives from Boston Medical Center's Birth Sisters and DREAM: Delivery Resources, Education, and Advocacy for Moms; UNC Health's Birth Partners; and Michigan Medicine's Dial-A-Doula. Because many health centers serve as large public safety-net hospitals, having more health center-affiliated doula programs nationwide could be a positive step in bridging disparities and improving maternal and child health.
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