JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. ā Tree of Life Family Birth Center in Jeffersonville, Ind., sits just over the Kentucky border.
The center has delivered nearly 700 babies in five years, including 14 this month, according to nurse midwife and administrative director Elizabeth Quinkert.
āA freestanding birth center is similar to an ambulatory care center, and thatās how weāre licensed in the state of Indiana under those licensing laws,ā she said. āItās an outpatient place that you can come and have your baby. We donāt do any type of medical interventions here.ā
The center, which includes birthing suites with beds and tubs, is located directly across the street from a hospital emergency room. According to Quinkert, emergency transfers are rare.
āIf thereās anything at all that weāre concerned about with them prenatally or during their labor that might jeopardize them or the baby during the birth process, weāre going to transfer to the hospital and have that birth over there where we have more access to other people and services that might not be offered here, such as C-sections,ā she said.
More than half of the centerās patients come from Kentucky, Quinkert said.
Mary Kathryn DeLodder testified Monday in support of legislation that would remove barriers to having these types of facilities in Kentucky. She is a Kentucky mother and Kentucky Birth Coalition director.
According to the coalitionās presentation citing the American Association of Birth Centers, Kentucky doesnāt have any of the centers, but every state bordering it does.
Thatās, in part, because Kentucky requires a certificate of need ā proof that the facility is necessary ā according to supporters.
DeLodder said she supports legislation that would require accreditation by the Commission for the Accreditation of Birth Centers and exempt birth centers from the certificate of need requirement.
āItās important to me because I think that we need more birth options,ā she said. āDefinitely, if I had had a birth center option available when I was looking to plan my first childās birth, I would have absolutely researched it and I know that we have lots of families in Kentucky who want this option.ā
Some people in the medical community told lawmakers they arenāt opposed to the centers. They said theyāre opposed to, what they called, āweakeningā of licensing standards. They said it would put patients and babies at risk.
āIf a complication during birth arises, the birthing center, we feel, must be located either within a hospital, connected to a hospital, or in very close proximity to a hospital because a quick transfer from the birthing center to the hospital is going to be critical to the life and health of the mother and child,ā said Nancy Galvagni, president of the Kentucky Hospital Association.
Galvagni said that the standards called for in the proposed legislation do not require a freestanding birth center to have a written transfer agreement with a hospital.
Rep. Jason Nemes, R-Louisville, is a co-sponsor of the legislation. Nemes said birth centers already have to get licenses to prove that theyāre safe and claimed opposition to the legislation is more about āmarket protectionā than safety.
Bipartisan legislation on the issue cleared both House and Senate committees earlier this year.
Senate Majority Floor Leader Damon Thayer, R-Georgetown, said the Senate didnāt have the votes last session to pass it.