Pregnancy, birth and postpartum

are sacred transformative medicine.

Planning a hospital birth and want additional holistic care?

Get integrative midwifery support

Tier 1 save $25

$400

1 prenatal + 1 postpartum visit + lactation support + newborn care

Popular

Tier 2 save $75

$775

2 prenatal + 2 postpartum visits + lactation support + newborn care

Tier 3 save $100

$950

3 prenatal + 2 postpartum visits + lactation support + newborn care

Need custom care on your terms?

Offering individual prenatal and postpartum visits at your request.

Integrative prenatal care

You don't have to be planning to give birth with us to access midwifery care! Whether you're seeking holistic pregnancy care & labor prep, assistance with a breech baby, or temporary care during a transition between providers, we welcome you. Feel free to schedule as many appointments as you need.

60mins | $200 | Book now *

*Free for low income Black women on Medi-Cal. Use promo code EQUITYNOW

*50% off for low income POC on Medi-Cal. Use promo code POC

Integrative postpartum care

In-person or in your home, this appointment is designed for individuals seeking lactation support, newborn checkups, and answers to postpartum healing questions. The session can include craniosacral therapy and herbal medicine. Feel free to schedule as many appointments as needed to address your concerns and ensure comprehensive care.

90 mins | $275 | Home visit *

90 min I $225 Office visit *

*Free for low income Black women on Medi-Cal. Use promo code EQUITYNOW

*50% off for low income POC on Medi-Cal. Use promo code POC

Pregnancy, home birth & postpartum care package

Prenatal care is offered at the same care schedule as an obstetrician: once a month until 28 weeks, bi-weekly until 36 weeks and then once a week until birth. Midwifery care differs from obstetric care for it includes hour long prenatal visits, continuity of care with the same provider, herbal medicine, diet and nutrition counseling, alternative therapies, emotional birth preparation support and optional childbirth education classes. A typical prenatal visit includes blood pressure, urine analysis, belly palpation with fundal height measurement to check on baby’s growth, listening to the baby’s heartbeat, and ample time for your questions and concerns. Below outlines some of what is offered throughout the care:

Initial visit 9+ weeks 
At your first visit we review your health history, discuss lifestyle, nutrition and exercise for a healthy pregnancy. Genetic screening and blood work is performed. Optional referral for an ultrasound is provided. We can hear your baby’s heartbeat as soon as 10-12 weeks!

15 weeks-20 weeks
A physical exam and prenatal lab work are performed and reviewed. The option for second trimester genetic screening and Cystic Fibrosis testing are performed between 15-18 weeks. Your uterus is palpated and baby’s measurements are taken after 12 weeks. Your baby's heartbeat can be heard depending on your baby's position, physical build, and due date accuracy. 

20 weeks-27 weeks
A required anatomical ultrasound referral is given, which looks for possible fetal abnormalities as well as the health and function of the placenta.

28 weeks-35 weeks
Prenatal screening for gestational diabetes and anemia tests are offered. Your blood is checked for appropriate levels of blood volume expansion. Antibody titer and Rhogam are offered to Rh negative people. Childbirth education classes are suggested and resources are given.

36 weeks 
Prenatal exam and home visit. We invite anyone who is planning on attending your birth including doulas and family members to attend this appointment. We will discuss what to expect in labor, your birth desires, how and when to call and answer any questions and concerns. Birth kit should be ordered and a labor supply list are given to parents. The Group Beta Strep (GBS) vaginal culture is performed. Rh antibody titer may be repeated on Rh negative people. Anemia is checked again if indicated. All birth fees are due. 


37 weeks until birth
Prenatal exams continue weekly until the birth. If no labor by 41 weeks a bi-weekly biophysical profile and non-stress test are recommended. Midwives can attend births out of hospital from 37-42 weeks.

Birth
Two licensed midwives are present at every birth. The midwives will remain for 2-3 hours after the birth to ensure that you and baby are stable and healthy. A thorough newborn exam is performed where the baby is weighed, measured, and evaluated. Vitamin K and antibiotic eye ointment are offered for the baby. We assist with breast/chest feeding. Postpartum instructions are given and suturing is performed with numbing medication if needed. 

Day 1
We provide a home visit check up on you and your baby.  Lactation support is provided and the birth certificate paperwork is given. The baby is tested for critical congenital heart disease and the newborn metabolic blood spot screening.

Day 3
We provide a home visit check up on you and your baby. Lactation and normal newborn transition is monitored. Your newborn records are sent to their pediatrician. 

Week 2
We provide a home visit check up on you and your baby. Lactation support is provided and a weight check for your baby.

Week 6-8
Office visit assessment of the health and well-being of you and your baby. We offer a pelvic exam with a Pap smear if due. Family planning options are discussed and pelvic floor health is checked.

$8500 care package

$9000-9500 care package with suggested donation to our Reproductive Equity Fund  

ATTENTION: we are not taking any home births for 2024

Fees

  • $8500 complete care package

    $9000-9500 complete care package with suggested donation to Midwifery Equity Fund  

    Integrative midwifery packages: Tier 1: $400, Tier 2 $775, Tier 3 $950

  • The type of insurance you have will be printed on your insurance card in the form of PPO, HMO, EPO. If it's not printed on your card, call your insurance company. Only PPO insurance will reimburse for our services.

  • PPO insurance will reimburse for services. Lab work and ultrasounds are covered. To submit for insurance reimbursement contact our insurance biller to submit a claim after services are rendered. The amount of insurance reimbursement is determined by your plan, deductible and copay. To determine your insurance coverage verify your insurance benefits with our insurance biller. Commonly, the “out-of-pocket” expense is thousands below the cost of a hospital birth.​

  • Medi-Cal, Kaiser, HMO & EPO do not cover services. However, EPO and HMO insurance will cover lab work directly.

    To access ultrasounds for Kaiser, Medi-Cal and HMO insurance, you will need to perform them with a provider in your network or with our out of pocket low cost ultrasound providers.

  • All our home birth clients are offered a payment plan. The balance is due by 36 weeks gestation. A $1500 deposit is required to secure your place in our practice.

    We accept cash, personal check, FSA, HSA and venmo. Credit cards are accepted with a 4% processing fee.

    Integrative midwifery packages are due at time of purchase.

FAQs

  • We believe in support, both for our clients and for midwives. We attend all births together and rotate prenatal and postpartum visits; giving you two midwifery perspectives! In the unlikely event that one of us is detained due to sickness or another birth, we guarantee one of us would be present at your birth with another licensed midwife.

  • We follow the OBGYN schedule with prenatal visits every 4 weeks until 28 weeks, every 2 weeks until 36 weeks and weekly until birth. All blood work and ultrasounds are covered by PPO insurance. If you have HMO, Medi-Cal or Kaiser insurance, we work with a low cost lab to keep these fees minimal for you or you can perform blood work for free with a provider in your network. We monitor you and your baby in the postpartum period at your home on the day after the birth, day 3, and at 2 weeks. At 6 weeks after birth you come to our office for a final visit. Additionally, we provide unlimited herbal medicine and a lactation consultant as needed.

  • A midwife is a medically trained primary care provider licensed by the Medical Board of California. A doula is a non-medically trained labor or postpartum support person, they are not trained to deliver babies or monitor the wellbeing of you and your baby. Doulas provide "non-medical" labor physical and emotional support.

  • Absolutely! However, you and your baby must be low risk to safely birth out of hospital. Midwives are trained to screen for low risk people and babies to determine who meets this criteria. It is safe to birth out of hospital between 37 to 42 weeks when all lab work is normal, there has been appropriate fetal growth and vitals for both the pregnant person and baby are normal. If you become high risk at any point, we will transfer your care to an OB and provide midwifery co-care as it is appropriate.

  • Midwives are experts in normal physiologic birth. We are trained to identify and refer to OBs if you become high risk. There are many myths of who is considered high risk which includes; being advanced maternal age (over the age of 35), having had a previous miscarriage, abortion, c-section, borderline diabetes and a high BMI. These are conditions we are trained to work with and can provide you with more information on staying low risk. If you remain high risk, we will transfer your care to an OB.

  • After birth you will be left with one bag of garbage and one bag of laundry. We leave your house as clean as it was when we arrived. Births happen regardless of the space. We have attended births in small to large spaces, pools, tubs, hallways, beds, couches, floors, birthing stools, outdoors and on toilets! Babies come out wherever they want to! No landlord has the right to deny you from having a home birth.

  • We are happy to work with you as soon as you have a positive pregnancy test or around 10-12 weeks. The earliest genetic screening and blood testing can be performed is at 10 weeks. We can work with you at any point in your pregnancy as long as we are available. It’s never too late to switch to midwifery care!

  • At your first prenatal visit we will review your medical history, discuss nutritional needs and any pregnancy discomforts you may be experiencing. We will provide holistic and herbal support for your pregnancy and perform any necessary blood work, screenings, tests and a physical exam as needed. Prenatal visits are 1 hour long which allows time to answer your questions and concerns. At every visit we listen to your baby's heartbeat and feel for the position of your baby. You are welcome to bring anyone to your appointments!

  • At each prenatal visit we will palpate your belly to check for your baby’s position. Midwives are trained in the art of belly palpation which tells us the position of your baby based on what we feel, where your baby's heartbeat is and where you report your baby's movements. If it is ever unclear we may refer you for an ultrasound to verify your baby’s position. We help your uterus to be in an optimal condition for birth. If your baby is not in a good position, we give you exercises to encourage them into a better position. A well positioned baby can lead to an easier, shorter birth!

  • Midwives are trained in the art of fetal positioning and will help to turn your baby head down. At every visit, we monitor the position of your baby and discuss physical exercises to encourage your baby head down. If the baby remains breech (head up) closer to the time of your birth we will help to arrange birth options.

  • Midwives are not allowed to deliver twins or breech babies without a physician present in the state of California. In order to have a home birth you would need to hire a physician for the birth in addition to your midwife or we will help you navigate hospital options.

  • Blood work is a great way to know the health and wellbeing of you and your baby! We perform all routine blood work in the comfort of our office. We test to know your blood type and Rh factor, if you are anemic, how well your blood clots, if you have an infection or are at risk for gestational diabetes. We discuss genetic screening and perform this if you choose. We require one ultrasound, as studies show that outcomes for low risk pregnancies do not improve after 2 or more ultrasounds. However, we may advise additional ultrasounds if needed. We also review Pap smear and physical exam screening guidelines and perform one if you are due.

  • There will be two California Medical Board licensed midwives at your birth.

  • Yes, we love waterbirth! You will need to purchase a water birth kit.

  • We have the same equipment as a birth center or a labor and delivery room in a hospital. This includes fetal monitoring equipment, oxygen, newborn resuscitation equipment, IV supplies, antibiotics, emergency anti-hemorrhage medications to stop bleeding, suturing supplies and medication to numb for suturing. We also bring herbal medicine and have a hospital transport plan arranged before birth. You will need to purchase a birth kit.

  • We ask to be notified when you are in early labor, as this is a time for you to rest and establish a rhythm with your contractions. We will assess which phase of labor you are in by the frequency and length of your contractions. We will have you use a contraction timer App so you can send the information to us as things progress. We will join you when you are in active labor, which is generally around 6 cm or more or when your contractions are 3 minutes apart (sooner if this is a second + baby). We will give you recommendations for positions to labor in including ways of coping and resting with contractions until we join you.

  • We are trained in herbal, homeopathic and pharmaceutical medicines. We carry the same medications that are in a hospital labor and delivery room. We carry custom made herbal medicines specific to labor, birth and postpartum.

  • Midwifery care is about prevention. We monitor you closely prenatally to ensure you have good nutrition, no anemia and appropriate iron levels as these are the first line of prevention for a hemorrhage. However, if a hemorrhage were to occur we bring the same medications as the hospital and use them as needed: pitocin, misoprostol, methergine and hemostatic herbs.

  • Most low risk people planning a home birth will have their baby at home. We are experts in normal physiological birth which includes identifying and responding to complications. Through careful monitoring and assessment of you and your baby's health during your pregnancy and labor, we determine whether you are low-risk to stay out of hospital. We keep in mind that part of the safety of home birth is utilizing the hospital when it is the safest thing to do. If your status changes to high risk, the hospital becomes a better setting for your care, we are with you every step of the way. Most transfers are due to a failure of labor to progress. It is very seldom that a transfer is an emergency. We will call ahead, provide records, and stay with you to facilitate your transfer of care. After your baby is born in the hospital, we will resume your care when you arrive home for the postpartum period and for any lactation support you need. While we do not have privileges in any hospitals, we have working relationships with hospitals which makes hospital transfers a smooth, positive experience, where you and your baby will be respected and will receive excellent care.

  • This is by far the most common question we receive! About 1 out of 3 babies will have a cord wrapped around their neck when they are born. Midwives are trained in the art of hand maneuvers for birth, which includes slipping the cord over the baby's head to allow the birth of your baby's body without any problem. The cord has a protective mechanism called "whartons jelly" which allows for oxygen to continue to reach the baby when the cord is compressed in the womb or at birth. Midwives are trained in other management options if the cord is too tight to slip over the baby's head.

  • Approximately 90% of newborns will not require any help to begin breathing. A midwife is trained to recognize the 10% of babies who will need assistance, and are certified in neonatal resuscitation and adult and infant CPR. We bring all necessary equipment to your home, including oxygen, in the unlikely event that resuscitation is required.

  • We monitor fetal well being throughout labor at the same interval as the hospital so we know your baby's well being prior to birth. If there are any signs of fetal distress heard in the heart rate, we will transfer to the hospital prior to the birth. If the baby were to be born needing assistance, both Midwives are trained and certified in Neonatal Resuscitation, infant and adult CPR and BLS and must recertify every two years as well as routinely practice their skills on a regular basis.

  • No, but we are trained to help manage labor through emotional and physical support which including labor positions for optimal fetal positioning, and holistic support. Many find relief in laboring and birthing in the water, as this allows the muscles to relax and the body move freely. When a person is emotionally prepared and allowed to listen to their body's intuition, birth progresses manageably and with ease. We can offer warm perineum compresses during pushing to help ease your baby out and prevent tearing.

  • We stay for 3-4 hours after the birth and leave when all are stable. We regularly check you and your baby's vital signs, clean up, give you something to eat, help you to the shower, perform a full newborn exam, assist in breast/chest feeding and give you postpartum instructions. We then visit you 24 hours later, again on day three, at two week and six week where we will continue to monitor the wellbeing of you and your baby.

  • Injectable Vitamin K is standardly given in the hospital. We offer the option for injectable or oral vitamin K and will provide you information to help decide what is right for your baby. Hepatitis B is also routinely given at birth in the hospital, which we do not offer. You can get this from your pediatrician if you choose.

  • You will need to select a pediatrician prior to birth. We will provide a resource of pediatricians that are home birth, breast/chest feeding and delayed vaccination friendly. If all is normal we recommend that your baby be seen by a pediatrician within the first two weeks of life, sooner if anything abnormal presents. Your pediatrician will provide a hearing test and all vaccinations if you choose. We continue to monitor your baby through 6-8 weeks postpartum.

  • When the baby is born the parents must register by law with the Department of Vital Statistics in downtown LA within the first year. All requirements can be found at the Los Angeles County’s Public Health website. We will provide you with the necessary paperwork and details.

“I had a wonderful experience with Fertile Moon Midwifery. Christian and Janell both have such a lovely manner. It was so easy to converse with them during appointments--it was my second uncomplicated pregnancy and I'd go in thinking I had no questions, but walk out 45-60 minutes later feeling like I talked the whole time. I felt very personally cared for but never intruded upon. Their policies regarding COVID safety made me feel comfortable and in my opinion struck just the right balance.

As for the birth, it was magical! Christian and Janell were a mostly hands-off yet reassuring presence. I so appreciate that Christian encouraged me and my husband to reach down and touch our baby's head when it came out. I wasn't in the frame of mind for it to occur to me at the time, and it's very cool that we were the very first people to touch him. The immediate postpartum hours at home were peaceful and cozy, and what a relief it was for the first two postpartum visits to take place at our home as well.

I wanted gentle, personalized, evidence-based care for my pregnancy and birth, and that's exactly what I got with Christian and Janell. They also handled my baby with obvious love and care.  I highly recommend them to anyone considering a home birth.” -Emily M.

"The majority of people living on the earth today have been born at home and 90-95% of the entire world's births are normal." -WHO

"The majority of people living on the earth today have been born at home and 90-95% of the entire world's births are normal." -WHO

Safety of home birth

  • The safety and benefits of midwifery care have been proven again and again in developed countries across the world, including the United States. The World Health Organization statistics show that births attended by midwives have lower infection rates, lower cesarean rates, fewer complications and healthier outcomes- thus, lower overall medical costs than physician-attended hospital births. In addition, there is no difference in infant mortality between midwife-attended and physician-attended births for low-risk women. Countries such as the Netherlands, Sweden and new Zealand, which have the best birth outcome statistics in the world, use midwives as their main maternity care providers. More than half of all Netherlands babies are born at home with midwives in attendance, and their maternal and infant mortality rate are far lower than in the United States.    

  • “Compared with those who planned to birth in hospital, those who planned to birth at home underwent fewer obstetrical interventions, were more likely to have a spontaneous vaginal birth and were more likely to be exclusively breastfeeding at three to 10 days after delivery."​

    2015 Canada Study: Large scale study (11,000+ home births) showed home birth with registered midwives just as safe as hospital birth

Evidence for traditional care

  • In a recent study that looked to evaluate the safety of home birth in North America attended by Certified Professional Midwives (CPM), found that planned home birth for low risk women in North America using CPMs was associated with half the rates of medical intervention, but similar intrapartum and neonatal mortality to that of low risk hospital births in the United States. It found that maternal satisfaction was high with over 97% reported that they were extremely or very satisfied.   

  • Both infant and maternal mortality are on the rise and medical interventions during childbirth are at an all time high. The situation is so bad that Amnesty International warned in 2009 that people birthing in the USA “have a greater lifetime risk of dying of pregnancy-related complications than women in 49 other countries.”​According to the Centers for Disease and Prevention (CDC) US infant and maternal mortality failed to improve between 2000 to 2005. This plateau represents the first time since the 1950s that infant mortality has seen no improvement. The US spends more than any other country in the world on health care and yet is only 33rd in the world in infant mortality. A baby born in Cuba, Slovenia, the Czech Republic or South Korea has a greater chance of living for the first year than a baby born in the US. In fact, a baby born in Singapore has twice the survival rate of a US baby.​

    -  Home Birth: Safe and Sane 

  • In the fall of 2014, Britain's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence has urged those with uncomplicated pregnancies to have their babies at home with qualified midwives stating that:

    ​"they were better off in the hands of midwives than hospital doctors during birth."

    For these low-risk, giving birth in a traditional maternity ward increased the chances of surgical intervention and therefore infection. Hospital births were more likely to end in cesarean sections or involve episiotomies, a government financed 2011 study carried out by researchers at Oxford University showed. Pregnant people were more likely to be given epidurals, which numb the pain of labor but also increase the risk of a protracted birth that required forceps and damaged the perineum.

  • Although many believe that hospitals are the safest environment for labor and birth, research shows that equally good or better outcomes can be achieved in low-risk people having planned home births or giving birth in freestanding birth centers. Because of its inherently non-interventive and more intimate nature, out-of-hospital birth facilitates mother-friendly care.

    -The Coalition for Improving Maternity Services

Studies & statistics

  • ​​5% U.S. births attended primarily by midwives

    75% European births attended primarily by midwives

    70% Midwifery led care in the five European countries with the lowest infant mortality rates​

  • "Americans could save $13 to $20 billion annual in healthcare costs by developing a network of midwifery care providers, de-medicalizing childbirth and encouraging breastfeeding."

    -Frank A.Oski, MD., Professor and Director, John Hopkins University School of Medicine

  • ​For this large cohort those who planned midwife-led home births in the United States, outcomes are congruent with the best available data from population-based, observational studies that evaluated outcomes by intended place of birth and perinatal risk factors. Low-risk people in this cohort experienced high rates of physiologic birth and low rates of intervention without an increase in adverse outcomes.

  • ​This bibliography serves as a resource for clinicians and others (researchers, educators and policy makers) to assess the quality of the available evidence on planned home birth. ​"Analysis revealed no statistical difference in mortality between planned home and planned hospital birth and the confidence interval did not allow for extreme excess risks in any of the groups (OR=0.87, 95% CI=0.54-1.41). There were significantly fewer medical interventions, fewer severe lacerations, fewer operative births, and fewer low Apgar scores in the home birth groups."

  • ​Home birth is an acceptable alternative to hospital confinement for selected pregnant people, and leads to reduced medical interventions.​

  • Planned home birth attended by a registered midwife was associated with very low and comparable rates of perinatal death and reduced rates of obstetric interventions and other adverse perinatal outcomes compared with planned hospital birth attended by a midwife or physician.​​

  • Planned home birth attended by a registered midwife was associated with very low and comparable rates of perinatal death and reduced rates of obstetric interventions and other adverse perinatal outcomes compared with planned hospital birth attended by a midwife or physician.​​

  • Planned home birth attended by a registered midwife was associated with very low and comparable rates of perinatal death and reduced rates of obstetric interventions and other adverse perinatal outcomes compared with planned hospital birth attended by a midwife or physician.​​

  • Planned home birth attended by a registered midwife was associated with very low and comparable rates of perinatal death and reduced rates of obstetric interventions and other adverse perinatal outcomes compared with planned hospital birth attended by a midwife or physician.​​

  • This study shows that planning a home birth does not increase the risks of perinatal mortality and severe perinatal morbidity among low-risk people, provided the maternity care system facilitates this choice through the availability of well trained midwives and through a good transportation and referral system.

  • New Analysis reveals those choosing midwife-led, out-of-hospital births at an increasing rate: Data Show More than 40% Increase in Home and Birth Center Births​

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