The New Space

opening a birth center in NYC in 2011

Meet the New Space

February 4th, 2009

Before we get to far, I wanted to formally introduce you to the project that has been consuming many people’s time over the last five years!  The New Space for Women’s Health is improving the quality of health care for all women in New York City by establishing an independent, center for birth, breastfeeding, and women’s health care. We envision empowering consumers to make infomed choices, have a healthy and satisfactory birth and post-partum care, and changing the conversation around women’s healthcare.

New York City became home to the first independent birth center in the United States in 1975.  First as a pilot project of the Maternity Center Association and then as the Elizabeth Seton Childbearing Center (“ESCbC”), birth center midwives provided personalized, respectful care to women and families.  At the two centers, midwives welcomed over 7,000 babies into the world and provided countless families with breastfeeding support, childbirth education, postpartum support groups and a strong sense of community.

ESCbC closed its doors on September 1, 2003 due to a number of management issues, including liability insurance costs and a lack of support from the new administration of the hospital that owned the Center.  On the eve of the closure, the New Space for Women’s Health grew from the desire to keep the independent birth center option, and a healthy, safe and empowering experience, alive in Manhattan.

The New Space has been successful in raising money and reaching donors who have been attracted by our clear plans, the strategic guidance of our leadership, and the obvious need for our existence in New York City.  Our research indicates that our facility will be operating at capacity very quickly, and donors have indicated their long-term support.  However, our critical need is immediate: we must secure leadership gifts to enable this project to commence.

In 2005, a generous and committed donor offered the New Space a 15-year lease on a 7,000 square foot space on West 30th Street in Manhattan.  Since then we have welcomed to our board finance professionals, nonprofit managers, lawyers, entrepreneurs, producers and philanthropists to our core group of midwives and healthcare professionals.  We are now working to fundraise the capital necessary to build a center that will care for over 20,000 women a year, including 1,200 births, and are slated to open in 2011. 

We are, of course, always looking for volunteers and advocates!  If you are interested in getting involved, you are welcome to contact me at becca [at] newspacenyc.org and we’ll work together to figure out a way you can be involved. 

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Two is a coincidence, three is a trend…

February 2nd, 2009

When the phone rings, it’s usually a regular business call.  Unless it’s the last week of the month, when we start getting incessant calls from the bar association, making sure, for the umpteenth time, that I am properly listed in the directory (and no, I don’t want to buy a copy).  But these days, we’ve been hearing from more and more pregnant women, calling because maybe, just maybe, we’re actually open, and if not, could someone please help with her insurance company?

We’re used to the “can you recommend an XYZ provider in Brooklyn” calls – in fact, we really enjoy being helpful in such a immediate, one-on-one way.  In a world of phone trees, we’re happy to be the friendly voice.  But, these insurance calls are coming more frequently, and one issue has risen to the top:

In the last few weeks we’ve gotten a number of calls from women who are covered by self-insured health insurance policies (often multi-national corporations or unions).  And many of these policies exclude out-of-hospital birth, going so far as to claim, in once instance, that it was an “experimental” procedure.  

I’m not sure how else to put this, except that these exclusions just make no sense.  Health and financial outcomes are better when low-risk birth is moved out of a hospital setting.  These company policies are costing – you guessed it – the companies.  These policies are not driven by the bottom line or concern for what’s best for mom and baby.  

Coincidence or trend?  We’re still collecting information, but if you have a story about a self-insured policy issuing a denial for out-of-hospital birth (birth center or homebirth) we’d love to hear from you.  We’re working on the best strategy to deal with the issue, and will keep everyone updated.

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