Home Birth Midwife in North Salt Lake, Utah

1 midwife 1 CPM · 0 CNM CPM licensed Free directory
1
Certified midwife in directory
1
CPM/Licensed Midwife
3
Hospital backup options nearby

North Salt Lake has 1 certified home birth midwife in our directory, including 1 Certified Professional Midwife. Utah has a licensed midwifery framework supporting planned home births. Utah Medicaid covers home birth for eligible families, which makes care more accessible. 3 hospitals near North Salt Lake provide backup if transfer becomes necessary. Midwives in North Salt Lake typically accept clients from 8 to 20 weeks and serve families within a 45-minute drive.

Midwife Availability in North Salt Lake

North Salt Lake has 1 certified midwife in our NPI registry: 0 Certified Nurse-Midwifes (CNM) and 1 Certified Professional Midwife (CPM). Most accept clients from 8 to 20 weeks and book out 3 to 5 months in advance. Contact them directly using the phone numbers below.

JT
Jessica Tandy Stahle
Licensed Midwife (LM)
North Salt Lake, UT
Jessica Tandy Stahle is a Licensed Midwife (LM) practicing in North Salt Lake, UT.
Accepting: Unknown Insurance: Unknown VBAC: Unknown

Home Birth Cost in North Salt Lake

Typical midwife package in North Salt Lake
$2,500 – $6,000
Prenatal care, birth attendance, and postpartum visits included
Birth SettingTypical Out-of-Pocket CostIncludes
Home birth with midwife$2,500 – $6,000Prenatal, labor support, postpartum
Hospital vaginal birth (Utah)$2,254 avg. OOPDelivery only; prenatal billed separately

Hospital out-of-pocket estimates from Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker, 2023. Home birth cost range based on regional cost-of-living data.

HSA and FSA funds can be used for certified midwife fees. Ask your insurance company about out-of-hospital birth coverage. Some Utah insurance plans cover CPM and CNM care.

Insurance Coverage for Home Birth in Utah

Medicaid / Utah State Plan
Covers home birth: Utah Medicaid covers home births attended by licensed midwives enrolled as providers.
Private Insurance
CNM often covered; CPM varies
TRICARE (Military)
CNM covered

Always verify coverage before signing a midwife contract. Ask your insurance company specifically about CPM and CNM billing codes for out-of-hospital birth. Many midwives can provide a superbill for reimbursement even if they are not in-network.

Hospital Backup Options Near North Salt Lake

A licensed North Salt Lake midwife will have a written transfer protocol and a relationship with at least one of these hospitals. Most transfers are non-emergency: stalled labor, desire for pain medication, or exhaustion. Emergency transfers are uncommon with properly screened low-risk clients.

Intermountain Health Utah Valley Hospital
1034 North 500 West, Provo 84604
★★★★★
Mckay-Dee Hospital
4401 Harrison Boulevard, Ogden 84403
★★★★★
University Of Utah Hospital And Clinics
50 North Medical Drive, Salt Lake City 84132
★★★★★

Midwife Licensing in Utah

CPM licensed

Utah licenses both Certified Nurse-Midwives and Certified Professional Midwives. Utah has a significant home birth community, particularly among religious communities in Utah Valley. The state requires midwives to maintain emergency skills and equipment.

Ask any North Salt Lake midwife for their state license number before signing a contract. Verify the license is current and in good standing with the state licensing board. A licensed midwife will carry oxygen, IV fluids, medications for postpartum hemorrhage, and neonatal resuscitation equipment to every birth.

Are You a Good Candidate for Home Birth?

Good candidates are low-risk: singleton pregnancy, 37 to 42 weeks gestation, no significant health conditions. Your midwife will review your full health history before confirming you are a candidate. Read our full guide to home birth candidacy.

Natural Delivery and Home Birth Support in North Salt Lake

Families searching for a natural delivery midwife in North Salt Lake are usually looking for the same core services: prenatal visits, low-intervention labor support, water birth options when appropriate, newborn checks, and postpartum visits at home. A qualified home birth midwife should be clear about which services are included in the package fee and which labs, ultrasounds, supplies, or assistant fees are billed separately.

Ask each midwife whether they attend water births, how they monitor parent and baby during labor, what newborn medications and screenings they offer, and how many postpartum visits are included. If you want a low-intervention birth but are not sure home is the right setting, compare home birth, birth center, and hospital midwifery options before you commit.

How to Choose the Best Midwife in North Salt Lake

The best midwife in North Salt Lake is not simply the first person with availability. Look for current state licensure, experience with your birth history, a clear hospital transfer plan, realistic answers about insurance, and a communication style that makes you more prepared rather than more confused.

Before signing a contract, ask for the midwife's license number, recent transfer rate, backup midwife plan, emergency medication list, refund policy if you transfer care, and two recent client references. If a midwife avoids those questions, keep looking.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a home birth midwife cost in North Salt Lake?

Home birth midwife packages in North Salt Lake typically range from $2,500 to $6,000, covering prenatal visits, labor attendance, and postpartum care. This is often comparable to or less than the out-of-pocket cost of a hospital birth for families with high-deductible insurance. HSA and FSA funds can be used for certified midwife fees.

Does Medicaid cover home birth in Utah?

Utah Medicaid covers home births attended by licensed midwives enrolled as providers. If you have Medicaid, ask your specific plan about out-of-hospital birth benefits and request a list of enrolled midwifery providers. Coverage can vary between managed care plans even within the same state.

When should I start looking for a midwife in North Salt Lake?

Start reaching out as early as 8 to 12 weeks. North Salt Lake midwives typically limit themselves to 3 to 5 births per month and fill up fast. Waiting past 28 weeks significantly narrows your options. Contact midwives directly using the phone numbers in our directory.

How do I choose the best midwife in North Salt Lake?

Compare license status, credentials, home birth experience, transfer protocols, availability, fees, and communication style. The best fit is the midwife who can explain their plan clearly for your pregnancy, not simply the first person who answers the phone.

Can I find a natural delivery midwife in North Salt Lake?

Yes. Many North Salt Lake home birth midwives support natural delivery, water birth when appropriate, prenatal care, postpartum visits, and newborn checks. Ask directly which services are included and what would require hospital transfer.

What is the difference between a CPM and a CNM in Utah?

A Certified Professional Midwife (CPM) is trained specifically for out-of-hospital births. A Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM) has nursing training and can practice in both hospital and home settings. Both are qualified for home birth. North Salt Lake has 1 CPM and 0 CNMs in our directory. Utah cpm licensed, so both types may be licensed in your state.

Other Cities in Utah

Browse certified home birth midwives in other Utah cities. Midwives typically serve families within 60 miles of their location.