California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB583 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly April 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 583Introduced by Assembly Member WicksFebruary 09, 2023An act to add and repeal Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to doula care.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 583, as amended, Wicks. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project.Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. establishes the Department of Health Care Access and Information, which administers, among other programs, the California Reproductive Health Equity Program to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things. This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health Department of Health Care Access and Information to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. outcomes. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.(e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.(l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.(s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.SEC. 2.Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:4.1.Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611.For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a)Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b)Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c)Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1.(a)The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b)In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1)On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2)On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3)Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c)The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d)The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1)Community-based doula groups.(2)Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3)Birthing centers.(4)Local public health departments.(5)Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2.(a)A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1)Payment for doulas.(2)Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3)Educational materials.(4)Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5)Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b)All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1)A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2)A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3)A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A)The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B)The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C)The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c)A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1)Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2)Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3)Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d)Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1)The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2)Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A)Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B)Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C)Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D)Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E)Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F)Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G)Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H)Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3.The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4.On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.SEC. 2. Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) is added to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
1+Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 583Introduced by Assembly Member WicksFebruary 09, 2023An act to add Section 127640 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to health. An act to add and repeal Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to doula care.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 583, as amended, Wicks. Reproductive justice. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project.Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things. This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.Existing law establishes the California Reproductive Health Equity Program within the Department of Health Care Access and Information to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services.This bill would make specified findings and declarations regarding reproductive justice.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NOYES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.(e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.(l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.(s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.SEC. 2. Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.SECTION 1.Section 127640 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:127640.(a)Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b)Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c)Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly April 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 583Introduced by Assembly Member WicksFebruary 09, 2023An act to add and repeal Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to doula care.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 583, as amended, Wicks. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project.Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. establishes the Department of Health Care Access and Information, which administers, among other programs, the California Reproductive Health Equity Program to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things. This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health Department of Health Care Access and Information to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. outcomes. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 583Introduced by Assembly Member WicksFebruary 09, 2023An act to add Section 127640 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to health. An act to add and repeal Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to doula care.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 583, as amended, Wicks. Reproductive justice. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project.Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things. This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.Existing law establishes the California Reproductive Health Equity Program within the Department of Health Care Access and Information to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services.This bill would make specified findings and declarations regarding reproductive justice.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NOYES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly April 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
5+ Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
66
7-Amended IN Assembly April 13, 2023
87 Amended IN Assembly March 09, 2023
98
109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1110
1211 Assembly Bill
1312
1413 No. 583
1514
1615 Introduced by Assembly Member WicksFebruary 09, 2023
1716
1817 Introduced by Assembly Member Wicks
1918 February 09, 2023
2019
21-An act to add and repeal Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to doula care.
20+An act to add Section 127640 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to health. An act to add and repeal Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to doula care.
2221
2322 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2423
2524 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
27-AB 583, as amended, Wicks. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project.
26+AB 583, as amended, Wicks. Reproductive justice. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project.
2827
29-Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. establishes the Department of Health Care Access and Information, which administers, among other programs, the California Reproductive Health Equity Program to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things. This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health Department of Health Care Access and Information to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. outcomes. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.
28+Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things. This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.Existing law establishes the California Reproductive Health Equity Program within the Department of Health Care Access and Information to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services.This bill would make specified findings and declarations regarding reproductive justice.
3029
31-Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. establishes the Department of Health Care Access and Information, which administers, among other programs, the California Reproductive Health Equity Program to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things.
30+Existing law requires the State Department of Public Health to develop and maintain a statewide community-based comprehensive perinatal services program. Existing law provides for the Medi-Cal program, which is administered by the State Department of Health Care Services, under which qualified low-income individuals receive health care services pursuant to a schedule of benefits. Existing law requires the department to convene a workgroup to examine the implementation of the Medi-Cal doula benefit, as specified, and, no later than July 1, 2024, to publish a report that addresses the number of Medi-Cal recipients utilizing doula services and identifies barriers that impede access to doula services, among other things.
3231
33- This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health Department of Health Care Access and Information to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. outcomes. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.
32+ This bill would establish the Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project, which would include a 3-year grant program administered by the State Department of Public Health to provide grants to specified entities, including community-based doula groups, to provide full-spectrum doula care to pregnant and birthing people who are low income and do not qualify for Medi-Cal or who are from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes, among others. The bill would require the department to take specified actions with regard to awarding grants, including awarding grants to selected entities on or before January 1, 2025. The bill would require a grant recipient to use grants funds to pay for the costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to eligible individuals and establishing and managing doula services. The bill would require a grant recipient, in setting the payment rate for a doula being paid with grant funds, to comply with specified parameters, including that the payment rate not be less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher. The bill would require the department, on or before January 1, 2028, to submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2029.
33+
34+Existing law establishes the California Reproductive Health Equity Program within the Department of Health Care Access and Information to ensure abortion and contraception services are affordable for and accessible to all patients and to provide financial support for safety net providers of these services.
35+
36+
37+
38+This bill would make specified findings and declarations regarding reproductive justice.
39+
40+
3441
3542 ## Digest Key
3643
3744 ## Bill Text
3845
39-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.(e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.(l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.(s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.SEC. 2.Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:4.1.Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611.For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a)Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b)Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c)Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1.(a)The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b)In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1)On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2)On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3)Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c)The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d)The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1)Community-based doula groups.(2)Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3)Birthing centers.(4)Local public health departments.(5)Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2.(a)A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1)Payment for doulas.(2)Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3)Educational materials.(4)Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5)Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b)All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1)A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2)A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3)A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A)The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B)The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C)The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c)A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1)Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2)Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3)Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d)Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1)The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2)Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A)Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B)Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C)Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D)Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E)Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F)Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G)Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H)Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3.The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4.On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.SEC. 2. Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) is added to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
46+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.(e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.(l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.(s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.SEC. 2. Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.SECTION 1.Section 127640 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:127640.(a)Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b)Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c)Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.
4047
4148 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4249
4350 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4451
4552 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.(e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.(l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.(s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.
4653
4754 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.(e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.(l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.(s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.
4855
4956 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5057
5158 ### SECTION 1.
5259
5360 (a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.
5461
5562 (b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.
5663
5764 (c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.
5865
5966 (d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.
6067
6168 (e) Where more than 80 percent of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.
6269
6370 (f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.
6471
6572 (g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.
6673
6774 (h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.
6875
6976 (i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.
7077
7178 (j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.
7279
7380 (k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience high and deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.
7481
7582 (l) Although Californias overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the states average.
7683
7784 (m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.
7885
7986 (n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.
8087
8188 (o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.
8289
8390 (p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant peoples access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.
8491
8592 (q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.
8693
8794 (r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.
8895
8996 (s) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, women or female. It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.
9097
98+SEC. 2. Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
99+
100+SEC. 2. Article 4.1 (commencing with Section 123611) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 2 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:
101+
102+### SEC. 2.
103+
104+ Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
105+
106+ Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
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108+ Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project
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110+ Article 4.1. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project
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112+123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.
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97-For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:
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101-(a)Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.
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105-(b)Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.
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109-(c)Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.
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113-(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.
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117-(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.
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123-(a)The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.
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127-(b)In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:
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131-(1)On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.
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135-(2)On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.
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139-(3)Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.
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143-(c)The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.
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147-(d)The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:
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151-(1)Community-based doula groups.
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155-(2)Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.
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159-(3)Birthing centers.
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163-(4)Local public health departments.
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167-(5)Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.
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173-(a)A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
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177-(1)Payment for doulas.
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181-(2)Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.
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185-(3)Educational materials.
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189-(4)Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.
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193-(5)Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.
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197-(b)All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:
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201-(1)A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.
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205-(2)A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.
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209-(3)A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:
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213-(A)The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.
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217-(B)The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.
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221-(C)The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.
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225-(c)A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:
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229-(1)Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.
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233-(2)Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.
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237-(3)Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.
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241-(d)Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:
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245-(1)The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.
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249-(2)Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:
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253-(A)Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.
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257-(B)Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.
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261-(C)Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.
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265-(D)Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.
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269-(E)Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.
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273-(F)Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.
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277-(G)Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.
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281-(H)Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.
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287-The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.
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293-On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.
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299- This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
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303-SEC. 2. Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) is added to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
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305-SEC. 2. Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 127650) is added to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:
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307-### SEC. 2.
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309- CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
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311- CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
312-
313- CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project
314-
315- CHAPTER 6.5. Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project
316-
317-127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.(b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.(c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.(d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.(e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.
318-
319-
320-
321-127650. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:
116+123611. For the purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:
322117
323118 (a) Community-based doula means a birth worker who provides full-spectrum doula care throughout the perinatal period, who is a trusted member of the community they serve, and who specializes in the provision of culturally congruent care, addressing discrimination, and meeting language gaps.
324119
325120 (b) Community-based doula group means a group or collective of community-based doulas working together that prioritizes access to doula care for underserved populations. The doula care that is provided by community-based doula groups often goes beyond doula services provided during prenatal and postpartum care, to encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant and birthing person and their family or supporting loved ones. Many community-based doula groups draw their membership directly from the communities that they serve. This often allows community-based doula groups to offer culturally congruent care, and not simply culturally appropriate care.
326121
327122 (c) Full-spectrum doula care means the provision of health education, advocacy, and physical, emotional, and nonmedical support for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum persons during the perinatal period, continuous presence during labor and delivery, and prenatal and postpartum doula support. Full-spectrum doula care includes the provision of physical, emotional, and other nonmedical support during miscarriage, stillbirth, and abortion.
328123
329124 (d) Perinatal period means the period including pregnancy, labor, delivery, and postpartum.
330125
331126 (e) Postpartum means the one-year period following the end of a pregnancy.
332127
333-127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.
128+123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.(b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:(1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.(2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.(3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.(c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.(d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:(1) Community-based doula groups.(2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.(3) Birthing centers.(4) Local public health departments.(5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.
334129
335130
336131
337-127650.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the Department of Health Care Access and Information.
132+123611.1. (a) The Birthing Justice for California Families Pilot Project is hereby established. The pilot project shall, upon an appropriation by the Legislature for this purpose, include a three-year grant program to fund community-based doula groups, local public health departments, and other organizations to provide full-spectrum doula care to members of communities with high rates of negative birth outcomes who are not eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated people. The pilot project shall be administered by the State Department of Public Health.
338133
339134 (b) In awarding grants pursuant to this article, the department shall do all of the following:
340135
341136 (1) On or before July 1, 2024, post applications for grants on its internet website and solicit applications.
342137
343138 (2) On or before January 1, 2025, award grants to selected entities based on the eligibility criteria.
344139
345140 (3) Require grant recipients to submit data to evaluate the pilot project, as determined by the department, and establish standard metrics to ensure consistency in data collection.
346141
347142 (c) The department shall not spend more than 5 percent of the funds appropriated for the purposes of this article on administrative costs.
348143
349144 (d) The following entities shall be eligible to apply for grant funding under the pilot program:
350145
351146 (1) Community-based doula groups.
352147
353148 (2) Community-based organizations serving pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people with accurate information that is generally accepted and approved of within the doula profession.
354149
355150 (3) Birthing centers.
356151
357152 (4) Local public health departments.
358153
359154 (5) Public and district hospitals with programs serving birthing people.
360155
361-127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.
156+123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(1) Payment for doulas.(2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.(3) Educational materials.(4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.(b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.(2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.(3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:(A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.(B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.(C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:(1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.(2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.(d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:(1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:(A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.(B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.(C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.(D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.(E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.(G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.(H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.
362157
363158
364159
365-127650.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
160+123611.2. (a) A grant recipient shall use grant funds to pay for costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care to individuals identified in subdivision (c) and establishing and managing doula services. Costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
366161
367162 (1) Payment for doulas.
368163
369164 (2) Travel expenses that are related to the provision of full-spectrum doula care for doulas and their clients.
370165
371166 (3) Educational materials.
372167
373168 (4) Incidental costs that a doula incurs in providing for the needs of families, including, but not limited to, meals, diapers, baby formula, and household items.
374169
375-(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 10 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.
170+(5) Administrative costs associated with providing full-spectrum doula care. However, no more than 15 percent of grant funds may be used for administrative costs.
376171
377172 (b) All of the following shall apply to a grant recipient in setting the payment rate for a doula who is being paid with grant funds:
378173
379-(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones, including doula visits at a pregnant persons home.
174+(1) A grant recipient shall include within the payment rate payment for perinatal care, including full-spectrum doula care support at three prenatal appointments or visits, full-spectrum doula care support throughout labor and delivery, postpartum care, including full-spectrum doula care support at a minimum of two postpartum appointments or visits, and additional services that encompass a broader and more holistic vision of support for the pregnant person and their family or supporting loved ones.
380175
381176 (2) A grant recipient shall not set the payment rate at an amount less than the Medi-Cal reimbursement rate for doulas or the median rate paid for doula care in existing local pilot projects providing doula care in California, whichever is higher.
382177
383178 (3) A grant recipient shall consider all of the following when determining the payment rate for a doula:
384179
385180 (A) The cost of living within the community served by the grant recipient.
386181
387182 (B) The market rate for full-spectrum doula care in the community served by the grant recipient.
388183
389184 (C) The minimum sustainable living wage in the community served by the grant recipient.
390185
391-(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to both of the following:
186+(c) A grant recipient may use grants funds to provide full-spectrum doula care to all of the following:
392187
393188 (1) Pregnant and birthing people with incomes less than 600 percent of the federal poverty level who do not qualify for Medi-Cal, including, but not limited to, people incarcerated in jail, prison, or other institutions.
394189
395190 (2) Pregnant and birthing people from communities that experience high rates of negative birth outcomes.
396191
192+(3) Pregnant and birthing people who would be eligible for Medi-Cal, but for their immigration status.
193+
397194 (d) Doulas who are paid with grant funds shall demonstrate either of the following:
398195
399196 (1) The core competencies required to provide services under the Medi-Cal programs doula benefit.
400197
401-(2) Competency, through training or lived experience, in all of the following areas:
198+(2) Competency, through training or attestation of equivalency or lived experience, in all of the following areas:
402199
403200 (A) Understanding of basic anatomy and physiology as related to pregnancy, the childbearing process, the postpartum period, breast milk feeding, and breastfeeding or chestfeeding, and awareness of the signs of depression throughout the perinatal period, especially the postpartum period.
404201
405202 (B) Capacity to employ different strategies for providing emotional support, education, and resources during the perinatal period.
406203
407204 (C) Knowledge of and ability to assist families with utilizing a wide variety of nonclinical labor coping strategies.
408205
409206 (D) Strategies to foster effective communication between clients, their families, support services, and health care providers.
410207
411208 (E) Awareness of integrative health care systems and various specialties of care that a doula can provide information for in order to address client needs beyond the scope of the doula.
412209
413-(F) General knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.
210+(F) Knowledge of community-based, state-funded, federally funded, and clinical resources available to the client for any need outside the doulas scope of practice.
414211
415212 (G) Knowledge of strategies for supporting breastfeeding or chestfeeding, breast milk feeding, and lactation.
416213
417214 (H) Knowledge of scientifically based disease prevention strategies for the client and child, including, but not limited to, screenings and vaccinations consistent with recommendations by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Periodicity Schedule developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Bright Futures initiative.
418215
419-127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.
216+123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.
420217
421218
422219
423-127650.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 127650.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.
220+123611.3. The department shall utilize a portion of the funds allocated for administrative purposes to arrange for, or provide, training on the core competencies described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of Section 123611.2 to people who want to become doulas or community-based doulas in need of additional training to maintain competence, and who are from communities experiencing the highest burden of birth disparities in the state, including, but not limited to, people who are low income, people of color, people from and working in rural communities, and people who speak a language other than English. The department shall ensure that the trainings are provided at no cost to participants and are accessible to these populations. The department may consult or collaborate with outside entities, such as foundations or nonprofit organizations, to fulfill the requirements of this section.
424221
425-127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.
222+123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.
426223
427224
428225
429-127650.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.
226+123611.4. On or before January 1, 2028, the department shall submit a report to the appropriate policy and fiscal committees of the Legislature on the expenditure of funds and relevant outcome data for the pilot project. The report shall examine the impact of the pilot program on a range of outcomes, including those focused on client and client family experience, prenatal and postpartum care engagement, doula workforce retention, cost savings, and clinical outcomes.
430227
431-127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
228+123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
432229
433230
434231
435-127650.5. This chapter shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
232+123611.5. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2029, and as of that date is repealed.
233+
234+
235+
236+
237+
238+(a)Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.
239+
240+
241+
242+(b)Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.
243+
244+
245+
246+(c)Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.