Certified Nurse Midwife

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Outline

Overview

  1. Master’s Degree
  2. Delivery experience

Nursing Points

General

  1. Degree type
    1. MSN
    2. Certified as a midwife (CNM)
  2. In the meantime…
    1. Work in labor and delivery
      1. Learn everything you can from the start of pregnancy to the delivery
      2. Care for as many midwife patients as you can to understand the patient experience
      3. Get A LOT of experience
      4. You need at least a year as a RN
    2. Start looking at schools that meet the Accreditation Commission for Midwifery Education (ACME)
      1. Usually, around 24 months to complete
      2. Finish with a minimum of a MSN
        1. Attend deliveries with another midwife
      3. Sit for boards
        1. Ameican Midwifery Certification Board
  3. Job outlook
    1. Work under a doctor
    2. Perform pap smears
    3. Birth control
    4. Care of the pregnant woman through delivery

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Transcript

Hey guys, I’m going to take you through the role of a certified nurse midwife. So what this type of nurse does and if you’re interested in this, how to go about achieving this.

Okay, so first let’s look at who they are. So they are practitioners that either work in offices and in the office they would perform just general like women’s health, things like pap smears and help with birth control, and they also will help a woman throughout her pregnancy and they will attend the deliveries and be the midwife for that patient. So to become a certified nurse-midwife, there are a few things. If this interests you, you should try to work in labor and delivery obviously because of a lot of your life as a midwife, it’s going to be spent on labor and delivery, helping these women have their babies. So you want to get that experience.

It’s really important. Plus it also tells you if you like this or not, um, you really need to have about a year of experience before you’ll apply to programs. And this experience should be in labor and delivery. So then you’re going to apply to some programs. You will attend the program and pass and then you have to sit for boards. So you have to take another board exam and pass that to be a nurse midwife. So just some key points here. When you finish this degree, you will end with an MSN. So you are going to achieve your RN, you’re going to go work for a year at least on L&D, and then you’re going to attend a school.

And uh, then sit for those boards again. So when you graduate, you will have a masters and that is the minimum now required. You need that experience. Like I said, that one year of experience. You will be working under a doctor’s license. So if you’re in the office with deliveries a doctor will be over you. There’s certain things a nurse midwife can’t do, at least in our state, for instance, if there’s a third-degree tear, the nurse-midwife cannot repair that, a third or fourth. So a doctor would have to come in and repair that. They also can’t perform C-sections. So if the patient is not gonna deliver vaginally or there’s an emergency and we need to have a Csection, the doctor is going to be the one to do that. A lot of your job outlook is going to be with pap smears, birth controls, and then care of the patient throughout their pregnancy.

All right, guys, I hope that told you a little bit about what a certified nurse-midwife does and how to go about achieving this. If that is what you want. A, we’d love you guys now go out and be your best selves today and as always, happy nursing. Okay.

 

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Concepts Covered:

  • Documentation and Communication
  • Preoperative Nursing
  • Legal and Ethical Issues
  • Communication
  • Integumentary Disorders
  • Studying
  • Prenatal Concepts
  • Prioritization
  • Intraoperative Nursing
  • Emergency Care of the Cardiac Patient
  • Delegation
  • Fundamentals of Emergency Nursing
  • Factors Influencing Community Health
  • Community Health Overview
  • Concepts of Mental Health
  • Neurological Emergencies
  • Test Taking Strategies
  • Basics of NCLEX

Study Plan Lessons

Admissions, Discharges, and Transfers
Advance Directives
Advocating For Your Patient
Applying for Jobs
Barriers to Health Assessment
Bed Bath
Being Successful in Orientation
Career Planning & Job Selection Course Introduction
Caring Licensed Practical Nurse Nursing Mnemonic (CLPN)
Certified Nurse Midwife
Charge Nurse
Climbing the Clinical Ladder
Communicating with Family Members
Communicating with Other Departments
Communicating with Other Nurses
Communicating With Other nurses
Communicating with Patients
Communicating With Pharmacy, RT, OT, PT
Communicating with Providers
Communicating With Providers
Communicating with UAPs
Communication Course Introduction
Confidence Building as a New Grad Nurse
Confidence in Communication
Confidence in Communication – Live Tutoring Archive
CRNA
Daily Charting
Day in the Life of a Community Health Nurse
Day in the Life of a Labor Nurse
Day in the Life of a Med-surg Nurse
Day in the Life of a Mental Health Nurse
Day in the Life of a NICU Nurse
Day in the Life of a Peds (Pediatric) Nurse
Day in the Life of a Postpartum Nurse
Day in the Life of an ICU (Intensive Care Unit) Nurse
Day in the Life of an Operating Room Nurse
Delegation
Documentation Basics
Documentation Course Introduction
Documentation Pro Tips
Documenting Escalation (Chain of Command)
Fall and Injury Prevention
Finding Your First Nursing Job as a New Grad
Fire and Electrical Safety
First Year in Nursing Course Introduction
Flight Nurse
Forensic Nurse
Fundamentals Course Introduction
Giving Handoff Report
Giving the Best Patient Education
Handling Job Rejection
Handoff Report
HIPAA
How to Give a Perfect Nursing Report (plus report sheet)
How to Take Nursing Report
How to Write A Nursing Progress Note
ICU Nurse Report to Floor Nurses
Interviewing with Behavioral Questions
Interviewing with Nurse Manager
Introduction to the Electronic Medical Record (EMR)
Invoicing Process
Joint Commission
Legal Aspects of Documentation
Legal Considerations
Legalities of Charting
License Maintenance
Linen Change
Live Bedside Report OB and PACU
Live Bedside Report Medsurg (Medical surgical)
MSN (Masters) vs. DNP (Doctorate)
Networking 101
NRSNG Live | From Student to Real Nurse
NRSNG Live | Avoiding Legal Issues as a Nurse
NRSNG Live | So You Want to be a Surgical Nurse?
NRSNG Live | The Successful State of Mind
Nurse Educator
Nurse-Patient Relationship
Nursing Care Delivery Models
Nursing Interviews & Resumes Course Introduction
Nursing Report & Communication Course Introduction
Nursing Skills (Clinical) Safety Video
Nursing Skills Course Introduction
OB (Labor) Nurse Report to OB (Postpartum) Nurses
Oncology nurse
Patient Education
Patients with Communication Difficulties
Portfolio
Precepting a New Nurse
Precepting a Student
Prioritization
Prioritization
Prioritizing Assessments
Provider Phone Calls
Radiation Safety for Nurses
Remaining Calm
Report For Transferring To a Higher Level of Care
Research Nurse
Resume and Cover Letter
RN to MSN
Safety Checks
SBAR and How to Give Handoff Report like a BOSS – Live Tutoring Archive
SBAR Communication
SBAR Communication Nursing Mnemonic (SBAR)
SBAR Practice Scenarios
Shift change and Patient handoff
The Customer Voice
The Medical Team
The Nurse Routine
The Top 5 Things You Need To Know About Documentation 1 – Live Tutoring Archive
The Top 5 Things You Need To Know About Documentation 2 – Live Tutoring Archive
Therapeutic Communication
Time Management
Transition To Practice
Transition to Practice Course Introduction
Trusting your Gut
What Guides Nurses Practice
Why CEs (Continuing education) matter
Working night shift
Working with a Preceptor