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HISTORY

SUNY Downstate Medical Center (DMC) is one of the 64 SUNY campuses located throughout New York State. It traces its roots to 1860. Today, the campus encompasses thirteen acres with a total student body of 1,600. The College of Health Related Professions (CHRP) was established in 1966 as one of SUNY Downstate's four schools and approximately 300 full and part-time students are currently enrolled. The nurse-midwifery program was one of CHRP's original academic units. In 1996, the program was the first program accredited by the American College of Nurse-Midwives to accept students with nursing backgrounds.


SUNY Downstate is the only academic health science center in Brooklyn, New York. Brooklyn, one of the largest inner-city, underserved areas in the nation, has long thrived with a changing diverse population, including many minorities and many first and second generation immigrant families. SUNY Downstate, as a public institution, is deeply committed to providing access to quality education and has a long history of serving the community by graduating scores of well-prepared physicians, nurses, midwives, physician assistants, physical and occupational therapists, as well as a myriad of other health professionals. It is particularly significant to note that its nurse-midwifery program holds the unique distinction of being the first nurse-midwifery school in the United States.


The SUNY Downstate nurse-midwifery program began in 1932 as the Maternity Center Association Education Program (MCA). In 1958, MCA began using Kings County Hospital Center (KCHC) in Brooklyn as its primary clinical site for student experiences. A close affiliation soon developed between the Nurse-Midwifery Program and the College of Medicine/Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Downstate Medical Center/KCHC. In 1974, the registration of the nurse-midwifery program was changed from MCA to Downstate Medical Center.

The program is only one of two in the U.S. to offer a Master's degree with a specialization in Midwifery. To date, more than 1,000 CNMs have been educated in the MCA/Downstate Program, many of whom have become leaders within the midwifery profession.

The opportunity for the development of the graduate midwifery track within the program evolved over almost four decades. In the 1950's the MCA faculty envisioned that in the future, the nurse-midwifery program on the Downstate campus would be offering a program of study at the graduate level. Over the years, this one year certificate nurse-midwifery education program has offered nurses with associate, baccalaureate, and masters degrees the opportunity to become nurse-midwives. The lack of graduate programs in both the College of Nursing (CON) and CHRP through the early 1980's precluded the faculty from fulfilling their hopes of changing the certificate program to a master's degree program.


In the early 1990's, the midwifery faculty began joint planning with the CON faculty to launch a master's completion program in the CON for nurse-midwifery graduates. In 1997, SUNY Central Administration and the New York State Education Department (SED) approved the CON's master of science completion program leading to a MS degree in nursing with a concentration in nurse-midwifery and in July 1998 approved CHRP's master of science degree in midwifery. The program is only one of two in the United States to offer a Master's degree with a specialization in Midwifery.


In the state of New York, legislative barriers and opposition from within and outside of the nurse-midwifery profession were strong forces to be overcome. From 1982 to 1992, the certified nurse-midwives in New York State lobbied to change the law to facilitate people from a variety of backgrounds to become professional midwives; this effort culminated in the passage of the New York State Professional Midwifery Act in 1992. The development of standards established by the ACNM Division of Accreditation (DOA), in 1995, paved the way for the faculty of the SUNY Downstate midwifery education program to work in partnership with the Midwifery Education and Service Division of North Central Bronx Hospital (NCBH), one of the municipal hospitals of the Health and Hospital Corporation of the City of New York. Together they were able to plan, develop and implement the first ACNM accredited direct entry midwifery education program in the nation to prepare people from a variety of backgrounds to become midwives. To date, almost 40 certified midwives have graduated from the SUNY Downstate Midwifery Education Program.



This midwifery program is the culmination of a vision shared by SUNY Downstate administration, midwifery faculty, graduates, present students, and future CNMs and CMs. The program was fully accredited by the American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM) Division of Accreditation (DOA) in January 2004.

For more information about ACNM DOA accreditation,
please contact the
ACNM at:
8403 Colesville Rd., Suite 1550, Silver Spring, MD 20910
Tel. (240) 485-1800.

http://www.acnm.org

This program is registered with and approved by the New York State Education Department. Its HEGIS code is 1203.10

The program registration number for the Advanced Certificate
in Midwifery is 12042.
The registration number for the Master of Science Degree
in Midwifery is 21570.

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