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Legislative Gaps in Addressing Rural Women’s Access to Obstetric Care in the United States: A Case Study of the North Carolina Home Birth Freedom Act
Author(s) -
Isabella Higgins
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
policy perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2377-7753
pISSN - 1085-7087
DOI - 10.4079/pp.v26i0.19290
Subject(s) - legislature , certification , medicaid , reimbursement , medicine , autonomy , nursing , economic growth , business , public administration , political science , health care , law , economics
Higgins Rural women in the United States face numerous barriers to accessing obstetric care. Hospitals and obstetric wards in rural areas are closing, and there is a shortage of rurally-located obstetric care providers. Recent experience in North Carolina provides insight into current legislative barriers to improving rural women’s access to obstetric care. In 2015, legislators in the North Carolina General Assembly unsuccessfully advocated for the Home Birth Freedom Act, which would have allowed certified professional midwives to practice in the state.

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