Cardinal Way Midwifery

Cardinal Way Midwifery Midwifery care for women’s health, fertility, pregnancy, homebirth, and postpartum recovery.

02/28/2026

The moment you need reassurance…your team is there to remind you…bear witness to your power…then quietly (OR loudly depending on the vibe) celebrate all you did to birth your baby!

One question we often hear… can I do this?In the quiet moments.In the middle of a contraction.When doubt gets loud.Our r...
02/28/2026

One question we often hear… can I do this?

In the quiet moments.
In the middle of a contraction.
When doubt gets loud.

Our response… yes you can.

Not because it’s easy.
But because you are capable.
Because your body was designed for this.

What we witness… yes she did.

We see the shift.
The surrender.
The strength that was there all along.

What we know… you can too.

Each journey unique.
Your story to write.
Same power within. 🤍

We’re preparing to take a little break ☕I’ll be stepping away for 6 weeks for some rest and connection with our family i...
01/16/2026

We’re preparing to take a little break ☕
I’ll be stepping away for 6 weeks for some rest and connection with our family in October.
If you’re hoping to have me as your midwife, this is the month to pause pursuing pregnancy.
Thank you for supporting rest—it helps me care for you better and support my families for years to come 🤍

Home birth has risks and hospital birth has risks, this is a major contributor to the cascade of interventions that have...
11/07/2025

Home birth has risks and hospital birth has risks, this is a major contributor to the cascade of interventions that have not been shown to improve outcomes in low risk pregnancies.

Stay informed and make the choice for which risks are more comfortable to you. Reach out to consult with midwife Courtney about your specific risks and understand your options.

An excellent article today from . Note the lack of evidence supporting the use of continuous fetal monitoring, the clear influence of business and economics, and the money grab from AI companies who claim studies support their product - when in fact they don’t - resulting in remote monitoring hubs.

I especially love that placenta accreta is described early in the article so the public can see that cesareans carry risk. As a result, we need to ensure that they occur only when needed or wanted.

Note that the photo for this article is of a remote monitoring hub. One such hub is up to 60 miles away from the hospital in which the woman is laboring.

“Nearly every woman who gives birth in an American hospital is strapped with a belt of sensors to track the baby’s heartbeat. If the pattern is deemed abnormal — too slow, for example — doctors often call for an emergency C-section.

But this round-the-clock monitoring, the most common obstetric procedure in the country, rarely helps baby or mother. Decades of research have shown that the tool does not reliably predict fetal distress. In fact, experts say, it leads to many unnecessary surgeries as doctors overreact to its ever-changing readouts.

The obstetrics field has long ignored these problems. Now, it’s putting more trust than ever on the flawed technology, often prioritizing business and legal concerns ahead of what’s best for patients, The New York Times found.

This fall, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists updated its guidelines on continuous monitoring, sanctioning it even as some other wealthy countries have cautioned against its routine use…

All three remote hubs, along with 400 other hospitals around the country, use A.I. software to help analyze the heart data. The software’s maker, PeriGen, has claimed on its website that 50 studies backed up its products.

But none of the studies found that the technology improved birth outcomes. PeriGen removed the list of studies after an inquiry from The Times. The company’s chief executive, Matthew Sappern, acknowledged that no clinical trials had shown benefits.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/06/health/electronic-fetal-monitoring-c-sections.html?unlocked_article_code=1.zE8.145f.FPhFANzFoVZp&smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Are we where we need to be in 2025?That’s a hard NO from the midwives of America.We can — and must — do better. ❤️  Midw...
10/07/2025

Are we where we need to be in 2025?
That’s a hard NO from the midwives of America.
We can — and must — do better. ❤️

Midwifery in the United States is underutilized, under supported by legislation, and underfunded.

ACNM’s recent Midwifery Workforce Study shows we have roughly 4 midwives per 1,000 live births — far below the WHO goal of 6 per 1,000.
With 3.7 million births a year, that’s a gap of over 8,000 midwives needed to meet even the minimum global standard.

💪 States with fewer restrictions on midwifery practice and equal reimbursement for community birth have better outcomes and improved access.
Meanwhile, states like Texas — where restrictions remain high — rank among the worst in preventable poor maternal outcomes.

It’s time for health policy reform that prioritizes midwifery care, for legislation that expands and integrates the midwife workforce, and for funding that reflects what we know:

✨ Midwives lower cesarean rates
✨ Improve outcomes
✨ Reduce disparities
✨ Strengthen families and communities

This National Midwifery Week 2025, let’s demand change — for less red tape, for more access, and for every family who deserves a midwife.

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McKinney, TX

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