Our vision is that every TN family has access to all types of doula care no matter their race or income level. Doulas work to ensure the voice of the family is the center of care, which is crucial for safety, trust, and better outcomes. We belive that through collaboration and respect among doulas, community partners, and healthcare professionals, we can increase the accessibility of respectful, evidence-informed, and supportive care from the community and healthcare system. This change will improve birth and postpartum outcomes making Tennessee the best state to be pregnant and birth our children. Doulas don't just change birth. We change generations.
We believe that doulas are valuable for all Tennessee families. We want to ensure TN doulas are the ones governing the profession and establishing our scope of practice. We know our profession the best.
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TNDA Mission:
1. Educate the public about the doula profession (including birth, postpartum, sibling, loss, lactation) who provide education, advocacy, community resources, physical and emotional support for women and their families before, during, and after childbirth.
2. Promote doula use to improve birth and postpartum outcomes.
3. Advance the doula profession through community education, providing a supporting network, and upholding professional standards while protecting the autonomy of the doula profession.
We want to make sure that any bill or legislation that is about us benefits doulas and the families we support.
Senate Bill 128: creates a doula pilot program to run fiscal year 2024-2025 for specified pregnant women enrolled in TennCare whose healthcare provider determines that doula care services are medically appropriate AND the woman has an increased likelihood of experiencing a higher-risk pregnancy .
Senate Bill 187: creates a 5 person Doula Advisory Committee (from 10/23 til 7/1/26) attached to the Dept of Health to recommend core competencies and standards for doula services, establish multiple options for Medicaid reimbursement rates for TennCare, propose incentive-based programs such as fee waivers to encourage participation from rural communities, and examine exisiting Doula pilot programs. Their report will be submitted 18 months after the first meeting to the Department of Health and TN legislation.
It also defines a doula in TN legislation for the first time. "Doula" means a birth worker who provides child birth education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant and postpartum women before, during, and after childbirth and loss;
The state will also develop a set of core competencies and standards for doulas providing doula services in this state
Senate Bill 394: requires TennCare to cover doula care for qualified Medicaid enrollees and doulas certified by the state or doulas certified by DONA, ALACE, CAPPA, CBI, Birthworks International, Commonsense Childbirth, International Center for Traditional Childbearing. The commissioner shall establish by rule a process by which the department issues a verification of certification.
Rebekah Porter has been working in the birth field for 30 years. She ran the Nashville Birth Network for 4 years and desires all doulas to be able to easily gain the tools they need to serve.
Meghan Buetler has been serving women during birth in Washington and TN. She plans to train as a midwife soon and is passionate about partners being involved in birth to the level they want to be.
Carolyn Paine is a VBAC mom herself and desires all women to be heard and informed.
Ashley Klasen has served as a doula for over 102 births in Idaho and TN. She brings her energy and love for birth to this organization.
Carolyn
We want many people to feel welcome to join us and be part of the change they want to see.
We strive to help our doulas become trained, certified, and verified.
Chandler
This program will help clients have access to more doulas in training and a subsidized rate. We believe that doula support during birth brings better outcomes.
Rebekah
We want to be aware of all the changes suggested by legislation about our profession.
Larriel is a student and finishing up her program in Maternal Health. She plans to help bring to light many topics regarding birth habits.
Kelsey
We host monthly doula meetups virtually and in-person.
Find us promoting the doula profession at fairs and expos.
TNDA also holds a yearly doula conference