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Midwife

Midwives are health professionals who have specialized midwifery education and training including completing a bachelor of midwifery degree or equivalent. They must be registered by their provincial regulatory body in order to practise.

Midwives are funded by the government. They provide primary care to pregnant people and their newborns. A midwife provides care to support the health and safety of the birthing person and their baby from early pregnancy, through labour and birth, until 6 weeks after the birth (postpartum). Midwives provide care in clinics and hospitals, homes, and birth centres.

How to find a midwife
If you’re in Alberta and you would like a midwife as your primary caregiver for your pregnancy, you need to register with the Alberta Association of Midwives. You don’t need a referral from a doctor.

Midwives offer complete care during pregnancy including regular appointments, ultrasounds, routine blood work, and emotional support. They can order prenatal lab work and screenings and can prescribe medicines. Midwives work with a specialist (obstetrician, perinatologist, or pediatrician—a children’s doctor) if any problems happen during pregnancy, labour, birth, or postpartum.

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