LamazeLIVE! 2024 Bundle
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Register
- Non-member - $515
- Non-Member - Group B - $205
- Non-Member - Group C - $205
- Non-Member - Group D - $205
- Member - $400
- Member - Group B - $160
- Member - Group C - $160
- Member - Group D - $160
Catch up on the highlights from LamazeLIVE! 2024 with this bundle featuring thirteen recordings from the virtual conference. LamazeLIVE! 2024 was packed with excellent presentations on topics ranging from incorporating acupressure as a comfort measure, the biomechanics of a squat, Black centered maternity care, and more! Participants may earn 11.75 Lamaze Contact Hours, 1.0 L-CERP, and 10.75 hours of CNE for watching the recordings.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
Stephanie Arnold will take you through the ups and the downs of a patient trying to have her voice being heard, only to have it ignored time and again.
"You gave us a good scare!", "Do you know how lucky you are?" "It's a miracle you survived!" Theses are harmless, loving, compassionate words most clinicians say to a woman who has survived a catastrophic childbirth. But are they really? Stephanie Arnold will take you through the ups and the downs of a patient trying to have her voice being heard, only to have it ignored time and again. And how through her survival, shares how best to support your patient when they feel their world is crashing in on them.
The presentation will include FREE resources and continuing education class on Amniotic Fluid Embolisms. How to spot them, what to do in the throes of one, what you can do to be prepared.
Miranda Klassen, Founder of the AFE Foundation will join Stephanie in the lecture.
Participants may earn 1.0 Lamaze Contact Hour and 1.0 hour of CNE.
Stephanie Arnold
Stephanie is an award-winning, international best-selling author, inspirational speaker and thought leader on a mission to help others realize that connecting with our sixth sense can not only enhance our lives, but can very well save them. Prior to sharing her own story in her best-selling book (37 Seconds), Stephanie enjoyed a decades-long career helping others share their stories as an Emmy-Nominated TV Producer. With her story inspiring millions of people, Stephanie dedicates her time to advocacy work & speaking at medical institutions, universities and even the Department of Defense about the benefits of listening to your heart when you head says otherwise. Her story is currently streaming on Netflix’s Surviving Death.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
The co-founders of The Village of Healing Center recognized struggles for Black women and provided a solution.
Cleveland, Ohio was found to be one the worst cities for livability for Black women. This included healthcare. The Black infant and maternal mortality rates continued to show an astounding disparity with no real solutions. The co-founders of The Village of Healing Center recognized these struggles for Black women and provided a solution. Culturally sensitive healthcare that looks like the community it serves from the aesthetics of the clinic to the faces providing care.
Participants may earn 1.0 Lamaze Contact Hour and 1.0 hour of CNE.
Dàna M. Langford, M.S., APRN-CNM
While working as a certified nurse midwife and serving on numerous committees, she observed Black women were not being heard in the discussion of racial disparities in maternal and infant health. She co-founded Village of Healing, a community development organization focused on healing and empowering the village to eliminate social determinants of health and decrease disparities. Under that umbrella The Village of Healing Center was developed to deliver quality health care that meets the social and cultural needs of patients. She founded Dàna M. Langford Consulting, an enterprise focused on uplifting communities and addressing systemic injustices through education, professional coaching, and advocacy. With a host of experience working in hospital systems as a certified nurse midwife, for more than 14 years, Dàna is invested in serving the Black community. She brings clinical bedside and corporate boardroom experience coupled with an adherent passion for the eradication of racial disparities to her companies and the communities she serves.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
This presentation will describe the nature and characteristics of Black women's interactions with medical providers during childbirth when accompanied by a Perinatal Support Doula (PSD).
This presentation will describe the nature and characteristics of Black women's interactions with medical providers during childbirth when accompanied by a Perinatal Support Doula (PSD). The study design was qualitative, and a phenomenological approach was employed to examine the meaning of 25 Black women's experiences. Clients broadly categorized experiences as both positive and negative. When medical providers respected them, their birth plans and/or collaborated with PSDs, women reported more positive experiences. They associated negative experiences with providers having their own timelines and agendas, and women perceiving their needs were unheard and/or disrespected.
Participants may earn .50 Lamaze Contact Hours and .50 hours of CNE when bundled with other conference sessions.
Cyleste Collins, Ph.D, MSW, MA
Cyleste Collins is an Associate Professor of social work at Cleveland State University. Her work primarily focuses on health disparities, infant and maternal mortality prevention, community-engaged research, community/academic partnerships, and family housing instability. She earned her MSW and Ph.D in Social work from the University of Alabama and her MA in Psychology from the University of California.
Heather Rice, PhD, CPNP-PC, PMHS
Heather M. Rice is an Assistant Professor from Cleveland State University College of Health (School of Nursing). She is also a board-certified Pediatric Nurse Practitioner who specializes in child and adolescent psychiatry. Dr. Rice earned her PhD in Nursing Science and MSN from Case Western Reserve University in 2017. Dr. Rice is a passionate advocate for infant and maternal mortality prevention, birth equity, reproductive justice, toxic stress and mental wellness. She is committed to addressing health disparities working in partnership with the community organizations Birthing Beautiful Communities (BBC) and the Village of Healing Center (VOH).
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
Join Big Fat Pregnancy to break down the data behind the three most common plus-size pregnancy myths, learn what fat folks need during their prenatal care, and how you can become a more fat-positive provider for clients.
Not sure how to work with pregnant folks living in larger bodies? Unfamiliar with the research on risks for fat birthers? Curious about challenging your internal anti-fat bias? Join Big Fat Pregnancy to break down the data behind the three most common plus-size pregnancy myths, learn what fat folks need during their prenatal care, and how you can become a more fat-positive provider for clients.
Participants may earn 1.0 Lamaze Contact Hour.
Emily Bernet, M.Ed., Doula
Emily Bernet (she/her/hers) is a queer single mom to two little ones. She transitioned to being a birth educator and doula because of her own experiences during her pregnancies. Before entering the birth space, she worked in higher education and earned her Master of Adult Education. Big Fat Pregnancy gave her the opportunity to combine her two passions and help others feel prepared for all the unexpected things that occur during pregnancy and baby feeding. You can find her attending births, writing curriculum for our courses, or in her tiny chaos garden.
Christina Hughes, M.Ed., Doula
Christina (she/her) is the founder and co-owner of Big Fat Pregnancy. She is a fat, queer, chronically ill, mom of two who worked tirelessly to make sure her pregnancy experiences were as fat positive as possible and now helps other folks living in larger bodies do the same. As a doula and educator she believes deeply in combating anti-fat bias during pregnancy, birth and postpartum and shines a light on current research and evidence supporting size inclusive care.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
Let's take a deeper dive at what actually happens during a squat, why body mechanics matter, and how to squat to effectively open the pelvic diameters in unmedicated and medicated labor and birth.
You might have heard that squatting is great for labor! Did you know that when and how you squat makes a difference? Let's take a deeper dive at what actually happens during a squat, why body mechanics matter, and how to squat to effectively open the pelvic diameters in unmedicated and medicated labor and birth.
Participants may earn 1.0 Lamaze Contact Hour and 1.0 hour of CNE.
Emily Wannenburg, DNDM, CLC, CD(DONA), AFAA, 4TFM
Founder
4th Trimester Fitness® Method
Emily Wannenburg is the founder of 4th Trimester Fitness® Method, a company devoted to the physical and educational preparation for labor, birth and postpartum. Living internationally for most of her life, she is a South African trained nurse midwife and has worked with more than 900 families as a personal trainer, and birth doula in the United States. It has been her delight to combine her 30+ years of professional expertise to create a company culture devoted to “Improving Birth through Movement and Education”. She is a popular speaker known for her “hands-on-get-up-and-move” approach to sharing information and firmly believes that when you teach one, you reach many!
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
This presentation explores the crucial connection between maternal mental health and the peripartum period, focusing on the empowering evidence based practice of mindful meditation.
Pregnancy is a transformative period marked by both joy and challenges, and mental well-being plays a vital role in this journey. This presentation explores the crucial connection between maternal mental health and the peripartum period, focusing on the empowering evidence based practice of mindful meditation. By cultivating awareness and acceptance of the present moment, mindfulness offers expectant parents invaluable tools to navigate the emotional rollercoaster of pregnancy. Drawing upon scientific research and practical techniques this presentation aims to empower birth professionals with knowledge and tools to support their clients to navigate their pregnancy journey with enhanced emotional resilience, emotion regulation and inner harmony.
Participants may earn 1.0 Lamaze Contact Hour and 1.0 hour of CNE.
Tracy Donegan, RM (B.Sc), Midwifery, M.Sc, Mindfulness Studies
Tracy Donegan is a renowned figure in the realm of midwifery and maternal health advocacy. With a wealth of experience as a Registered Midwife, doula trainer and childbirth educator Tracy has been a vocal global campaigner for enhancing maternity services since 2005. An accomplished author of five books and creator of several apps, Tracy is also an internationally recognized speaker on mindfulness, maternal health, breastfeeding, and positive birth experiences. Tracy resides in Texas with her husband and two sons.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
his talk introduces the concept of synergizing efforts of doulas, nurses, and childbirth educators to elevate maternal care in hospitals.
This talk introduces the concept of synergizing efforts of doulas, nurses, and childbirth educators to elevate maternal care in hospitals. It outlines the unique benefits of doulas and provides a roadmap to overcome common challenges to their integration. It also discusses ways to create effective communication channels and foster a collaborative environment for all. It further examines barriers to integration and provides successful examples of doula incorporation in hospital systems focusing on childbirth educators.
Participants may earn .75 Lamaze Contact Hours and .75 hours of CNE when bundled with other conference sessions.
Kathryn M. L. Konrad, PhD, RNC-OB, LCCE, FACCE
Kathryn M. L. Konrad, PhD, RNC-OB, LCCE, FACCE is an assistant professor of nursing at the University of Oklahoma Fran and Earl Ziegler College of Nursing. She is an experienced labor nurse and birth advocate with a long track record of working with doulas and other birth advocates. Her research centers on coping in the perinatal period and addressing maternal mortality.
Robin Elise Weiss, PhD, MPH, BDT/AdvCD(DONA), LCCE, FACCE, CLC
Robin Elise Weiss, PhD, MPH, BDT/AdvCD(DONA), LCCE, FACCE, CLC is a birth doula trainer and professor of public health working to foster positive relationships with doulas and other healthcare professionals. Learn more at http://robineliseweiss.com
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
In this presentation, we'll explore the colliding worlds of health systems, payors, and doulas, perinatal educators and other providers that are adjacent to those systems and what we understand to be the opportunities and challenges in designing better care.
In this presentation, we'll explore the colliding worlds of health systems, payors, and doulas, perinatal educators and other providers that are adjacent to those systems and what we understand to be the opportunities and challenges in designing better care. With the advent of legislation such as H.R. 959 Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act, and innovations in Medicaid and Medicare Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) Initiative, care created by communities, within our communities, is gaining recognition. But does having insurance coverage or reducing cost barriers for doula care or lactation services, for example, solve for access? What is possible when we build Circles of Support for all? Who is included? How do we build it? In this session, we'll explore the providers and services that together comprise a Circle of Support, and we'll expand what "access" at the level of service delivery means, turning a lens on our actual practices in use as we serve our communities, and emerging with actionable steps to become better access builders and collaborators.
Participants may earn .75 Lamaze Contact Hours and .75 hours of CNE when bundled with other conference sessions.
Karen Laing, IBCLC, AMT
Karen creates learning experiences built from her mindfulness-based embodiment practices that are essential to safe, compassionate and unbiased care delivery, while preventing burnout. Her 30-year career spans the intersections of care delivery and system design, training and mentorship models for birth workers, and health care quality improvement. Leveraging technology and the power of collaboration, she is working to improve access to pregnancy care support systems, while preserving the autonomy and sustainability for the doulas and providers that serve their communities.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
In this session, we will help you understand the power that prenatal yoga has to help get pregnant people connected and attuned with their bodies.
Birth is an embodied experience! In this session, we will help you understand the power that prenatal yoga has to help get pregnant people connected and attuned with their bodies. Learn how to use movement as a tool to teach the functions of birth. We will explore how to teach childbirth education through movement by exploring the levels of the pelvis, movements for stages of labor and embodied relaxation techniques.
Participants may earn .75 Lamaze Contact Hours and .75 hours of CNE when bundled with other conference sessions.
Sue Ann Fisher, MPH
Doula, Prenatal/Postnatal Yoga Instructor
Sue Ann has been studying yoga since 2012. Her passion is to help students feel stronger in their bodies and more connected to their hearts. Sue Ann holds a master’s in public health, 800 hour Vijnana Yoga Certificate, a 500 hour Yoga Alliance Certificate, and 85 hour Prenatal Yoga Teacher Certificate. Teaching private and group prenatal classes quickly became a passion. Throughout her own pregnancy, yoga and the yoga community were essential for Sue Ann. Prenatal Yoga strengthened her connection with her own body, her baby and her community. She feels honored to share these teachings and contribute to others’ transformational experiences.
Roxy Robbins, CD(DONA), PD(DONA)
Prenatal/Postnatal Yoga Instructor
Roxy is an experienced Birth and Postpartum Doula, Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator, Certified Perinatal Yoga Instructor and Licensed Massage Therapist. She finds her greatest joy in guiding families through intentional yoga practices that combine functional movement, childbirth education, and body literacy. She’s Co-Owner of Flow of Life Yoga where she teaches perinatal yoga classes and workshops that cultivate community, connection, and courage.
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Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits
This session will help childbirth educators to re-examine their important role in educating and supporting families.
Lactation is the culmination of the physiologic process of pregnancy and birth, but time in Lamaze classes is short to delve in deeply. This session will help childbirth educators to re-examine their important role in educating and supporting families. The many opportunities to engage with families before and after birth to access accurate information and resources for support will be highlighted. Strategies for class discussion, validating concerns, respectfully balancing cultural traditions with evidence-based practice, and using inclusive language will be offered.
Participants may earn 1.00 Lamaze Contact Hour, 1.00 hour of CNE, and 1.00 L-CERP.
Allison Walsh, IBCLC, LCCE, FACCE
Allison is an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant (2006), Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator (2000), and doula (2000) in private practice providing in-home and virtual visits in New York City. She is one of the three founders of the Lactation Learning Collective, which offers education and support to those on the pathway toward certification as International Board Certified Lactation Consultants along with families in need of lactation support. She has trained childbirth educators as a Co-Director of the NYC Lamaze Childbirth Educator Program for two decades and is a past president of Lamaze International. Allison has represented Lamaze International as a delegate to the United States Breastfeeding Committee since 2004, and has served in various leadership and committee roles. Allison is a member of the New York City Breastfeeding Leadership Council, the New York Lactation Consultant Association, and an active La Leche League Leader. Prior to the birth of her first child, Allison was a political consultant and community organizer -- skills from that “past life” are useful in all aspects of her work in the birth world. She is a graduate of Syracuse University and mother of three formerly breastfed children.