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this newsletter was produced by rose lundy

Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness helped train about 30 doulas to help fill gaps in services as other birthing services across the state have ceased. Photo courtesy Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness.

Indigenous organization trained 30 new doulas


Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness for the first time has trained about 30 doulas to help families leading up to and during birth as other birthing services across the state have ceased.


Lisa Sockabasin, co-CEO of the health organization based in Bangor, said she heard from concerned community members about the crisis of closing birthing centers across Maine, so Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness decided to help fill in the gaps.


Most of the participants in the late-September training were Indigenous, though some were not, she said. A tribal chief participated, as well as other community members. The trainers were Indigenous doulas from Canada.


Sockabasin said it is important to have Indigenous doulas in particular because they can incorporate cultural aspects into their work.


"It’s about that time being honored, being sacred. It’s a very spiritual time,” she said. “That birth is a ceremony.”


Doulas are nonmedical care workers who provide educational, physical and emotional support to pregnant, birthing and postpartum people and their families. A 2023 survey of 45 doulas, conducted by the Maine Doula Coalition, found they were overwhelmingly female and white, and highly concentrated in southern Maine. 


Sockabasin said doulas with her organization will also be able to connect families with other services for challenges related to substance use disorder, poverty and mental health. 


Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness serves the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians, the Aroostook Band of Micmacs, the Passamaquoddy Tribe at Indian Township, the Passamaquoddy Tribe at Pleasant Point and the Penobscot Nation.


“When you wrap love and support around an individual, they thrive,” Sockabasin said. “If they have a baby inside them, that baby is going to thrive, too.”


Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness had hoped to start up a doula program soon, but the current federal funding landscape has made that more difficult, Sockabasin said. It is now likely the organization will have to wait for additional funding or until doulas can be reimbursable by MaineCare, the state’s version of Medicaid.


Sockabasin said conversations with the state around reimbursement are ongoing, but any change likely wouldn’t take effect until 2027.


Sockabasin said her broader goal would be to have an Indigenous birthing center in Maine. Minnesota recently opened one, with support from the state’s Legislature. She’d like to see the same thing happen here.


Eleven birthing units in Maine have closed in the last decade, four of which closed in the last year. The closures leave 17 hospitals with delivery wards remaining across the state.


The training was funded by part of a $385,000 grant Wabanaki Public Health and Wellness received from the state, Sockabasin said.

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The big stories in Maine this week have centered on immigration detainments by federal agents. Here are three people whom The Maine Monitor featured: 


— Juan Sebastian Carvajal-Munoz, who is from Columbia and is employed by an engineering consulting company in Portland, was detained by masked agents who smashed his car window and left the vehicle running on the side of the road. 


— Micheline Ntumba, who is from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and has a pending asylum application, was detained Wednesday morning after dropping off one of her four children at Portland High School. 


— Evaristo Kalonji, who is from Angola and has a pending asylum case, was detained close to his home in Westbrook.


All three have no criminal record.

February 4: Join The Maine Monitor’s religion reporter Sean Scott in-person at the Bangor Public Library, or virtually, from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. for a panel discussion with Maine leaders at faith-based organizations who are serving low-income and other vulnerable community members, including by providing housing, food assistance and addiction recovery services. Local faith leaders will talk about the needs they are seeing in their communities and how they aim to fill in the gaps. Register to attend in-person or virtually.
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While The Maine Monitor does not place its content behind paywalls, some newsrooms we link to in this newsletter may. 

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Maine ‘tobacco taxes’ grade sees a boost in State of Tobacco Control Report | WMTW


Products from Maine marijuana chain test positive for pesticides | Bangor Daily News


Portland, Maine, mental health clinic reaches settlement over alleged drug diversion | WMTW


Long-term care facilities in Maine monitoring workforce disruptions amid ICE activity | Maine Public


Maine lawmakers in Government Oversight Committee call for investigation regarding MaineCare fraud | WABI


Maine made $45.6M in improper payments for autism services, feds say | Portland Press Herald


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Audit finds Maine made $45.6 million in improper Medicaid payments for autism services | WMTW


Lawmakers consider a bill to improve direct care payments | WMTW


New bill would raise reimbursement rate for direct care workers in Maine | News Center Maine


Castine group will try to open direct primary care clinic after Northern Light departure | Bangor Daily News


It’s nearly impossible to get a primary care doctor in Bangor | Bangor Daily News


How common is MaineCare fraud? | Portland Press Herald

Get in touch: If you have any story suggestions, feedback or corrections, please never hesitate to reach out to me. I love hearing from readers: rose@themainemonitor.org.


The Maine Monitor is a publication of the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, an independent and nonpartisan nonprofit news organization that produces investigative journalism. We believe news is a public good and keep our news free to access. We have no paywall and do not charge for our newsletters. If you value the reporting we do for Maine, please consider making a donation! We cannot do this reporting without your support.

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