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Broadly, doulas provide expecting and new mothers with educational, emotional, and advocating support before, during and after a baby is born.
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Dan Carino
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LAist
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What Do Doulas Do — And How Can I Find One In LA?
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Listen 15:37
What Do Doulas Do? And How Can You Find One In LA?

Some people put together a birth plan for the occasion, with detailed preferences from birthing ball to breastfeeding.

Sometimes those birth plans include the services of doula, but not everyone knows what a doula does — and not all doulas do the same thing.

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OK, But What Exactly Is A Doula?

Broadly, doulas provide expecting and new mothers or birthing people with educational, emotional and physical support before, during and after a baby is born. Some doulas work with clients who are navigating a pregnancy loss, including miscarriage and still birth. Other doulas work with those seeking an abortion. One term for someone that does it all is a “full spectrum” doula.

Doulas are non-medical birth workers. They are not doctors or midwives. They don't deliver babies and they do not make medical decisions on a client's behalf or tell them what to do.

Think of them more like coaches or advocates for pregnant people and their partners as they approach their due date, while they're giving birth and during the postpartum phase.

"The purpose is that the clients are educated, empowered and inspired to make informed decisions for a healthy birth outcome," said Compton doula Bethany Benson.

Doulas have existed in one form or another since ancient times. Before hospitals and modern medical care, a woman typically was assisted by family members while she gave birth at home. The word doula comes from a Greek word for female helper, but this work is not limited to women.

I Already Have Questions

We did too. There's a lot to consider. How do you interview a doula? How do you know they're qualified? Will insurance cover their services? What exactly are their services? What are the advantages? Are there any disadvantages? Also, how do I find one?

LAist readers sent us more than a dozen questions, and we spoke with 20+ California doulas to get answers.

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Do Doulas Have Any Effect On Birth Experiences?

LAist reader Anne Buster told us that working with a doula when her sons were born created a better birth environment. She asked, "Do statistics back this up?" "Better" is a subjective term, but there is data about birth outcomes:

  • A 2016 study of Medicaid-funded births found women who worked with a doula were less likely to have a preterm birth or cesarean section (this could also save health insurers nearly $1,000 per birth).
  • A 2017 review of more than two dozen studies around the world found that women who received "continuous support" (like what a doula provides) during labor were less likely to have a cesarean section and could use fewer pain medications.
  • The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, a professional organization of more than 60,000 physicians, said that in addition to nursing support, the continuous “one-to-one” support provided by doulas is associated with improved outcomes for birthing people.

Doulas are also increasingly viewed as key to efforts to reverse birth disparities experienced by women of color. In Los Angeles County, Black infants die at three times the rate for white infants and Black Californians die at disproportionately high rates from pregnancy complications.

ABOUT THIS STORY'S LANGUAGE
  • You might notice this story uses the term pregnant or birthing people. That's because our newsroom uses language in reproductive health that includes people of different genders who can give birth.

  • To see a full explanation of our language choices, check out Dialogue, LAist’s style guide, and give us feedback.

"The data are showing doula support during pregnancy and during the labor and delivery period can help to sort of mitigate some of these risks," said Rachel Hardeman, a University of Minnesota researcher who specializes in reproductive health equity. "I think we should be careful to understand that this is one piece of this bigger puzzle."

What Does Doula Support Look Like?

A close-up image of a pregnant woman sitting wearing a black shirt with her hands resting on her legs.
Doulas say the foundation of their work happens before the baby is born.
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Mariana Dale/LAist
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Birth Planning

The doulas LAist spoke with say they support people with a variety of birth plans including cesarean sections, vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC), hospital and home births.

“We don't try to force you to have your baby out in the woods without medication,” said Los Angeles doula Michelle Sanders. “If you want all the medication, tell me that and I will go down the list of all the medications and interventions with you so that you know what they are."

Long Beach doula Stevie Merino emphasized she wants to provide non-judgmental support to clients.

"I'm not going to project what I want for you, onto you," Merino said.

Listen 2:03
After Pregnancy Loss, Long Beach Mom Seeks Knowledge And A Doula

Each doula will have their own areas of expertise and their own way of doing things, but here are some examples of what to expect from a doula when you're expecting.

Prenatal Visits

Doulas have prenatal meetings virtually, at the client's home, or wherever they're comfortable. Those meetings vary in length from an hour to several hours. It also might be more than one meeting.

Possible agenda items:

  • Creating a birth plan 
  • Stretches or exercises
  • Dietary and nutritional information
  • Attending doctor's appointments
  • Childbirth and infant care education
  • Coaching for a partner, family member or friend on how to support the birthing person
  • Herbal or essential oil treatments
  • Pain management techniques
  • Questions about birth, including those related to anatomy and physiology
  • Navigating birth as an LGBTQ+ person
  • Ways families can prepare for postpartum—including physical healing, breast or chest feeding, and self-care strategies

Many doulas LAist talked to also frequently communicate with their clients by text and phone in between in-person appointments to answer questions.

There is a calm and patience, with knowledge, that a partner can't have. And a dedication and intimacy that the doctor, or in my case, the midwife, doesn't engage in.
— Marisa Davis, mom

Birthing Support, IRL Or Virtual

Doulas are on-call in the time leading up to labor. Most also have a trusted back-up doula in case they're not able to attend the birth. Some doulas offer virtual support when they cannot be physically present.

During labor doulas can offer:

  • Massage
  • Guided visualizations
  • Help with positioning the birthing person
  • Snacks! 
  • Photography and documentation of the birth process

Sara Lutz hired a doula to help with the birth of her third and fourth children. "When we hit some rough patches with the pushing stage… she was the one holding me up and moving my dreadfully tired body into the positions my baby needed me in."

Doulas can also help keep track of their client’s birth plan.

Listen 2:06
What It Means To 'Make Space' For Someone Giving Birth

"They are the eyes and ears, knowing what a mother needs and wants, when I was so deep in labor, that I couldn't have spoken for myself," wrote Marisa Davis. "There is a calm and patience, with knowledge, that a partner can't have. And a dedication and intimacy that the doctor, or in my case, the midwife, doesn't engage in."

But births don't always go according to plan. Sometimes families have to make unexpected decisions, like whether to have a c-section, episiotomy or induce labor.

Cyndi Whitwell, who has been a doula for more than 30 years in Sacramento, asks doctors to give her clients five minutes to consider any major changes.

"It's really helping them take a step back, take a breath and examine their options and decide what's best for them," Whitwell said.

Hospital Birth In A Pandemic

Having a baby is one of an infinite number of once-routine activities that was changed by the pandemic.

“Birth is uncertainty, but now we add even more uncertainty on top of it,” perinatal care specialist Mikaela Lynn said.

A woman wearing a blue shirt with red flowers stands in front of her laptop at the kitchen counter. There are a pair of bright yellow barstools in the foreground.
Doula work relies heavily on in-person relationships, but like other doulas, Monique Cowan shifted to working with clients remotely during the pandemic.
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Chava Sanchez/LAist
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Hospitals changed their policies to follow the guidance of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the California and local departments of public health and other organizations.

“Safety is the priority,” said Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Executive Director of Women and Children’s Services Michelle Souza.

Doulas and hospital staff said it’s important to ask hospitals about their visitation and COVID-19 policies as your due date approaches because during the pandemic they’ve changed from day to day.

A group of California birth workers and other advocates created a list of useful questions including:

  • How many people can come with me for labor support? Can they come and go? Do they have to wear a mask or any other special protective gear? Do you provide the mask/equipment?
  • How have your policies changed because of COVID? Do you expect any more facility changes?
  • What is your COVID-19 testing policy?
  • If I am found to have COVID-19, what will change regarding my care?

Earlier in the pandemic, hospital restrictions eliminated or limited visitors during birth. Now many hospitals allow for at least one visitor and a doula, but still have additional guidelines. There might also be different policies when it comes to visitors during prenatal appointments.

“Visitation in the hospitals, we know it's different and it probably will be different for a long time,” Souza said.

For example, hospitals may require visitors and doulas to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test. Doulas may also have to provide some proof of certification from a training organization (more on why that’s complicated below.)

“We want doulas to be present,” Souza said. “We want their collaboration during this birth experience.”

Even if your doula isn't able to be physically present at the birth, ask the hospital about accommodating virtual support by phone or video chat— don’t forget to pack the charger.

A Little More On Collaborating With The Hospital Birthing Team

Hospitals are not always welcome places during childbirth. A 2019 study found one in six women reported mistreatment during childbirth ranging from verbal abuse to ignored requests for help. The rates were higher for Black, Indigenous and Latino women. Other studies have found these perceptions of poor treatment are tied to disparities in care.

LAist has talked to doulas who’ve described sometimes contentious interactions with physicians and health care workers, but we also talked to hospital staff who said they want to work with doulas.

“I always encourage my colleagues to never ever look down on a patient who comes in with a birth plan,” said Emanate Health nurse and doula Nancy Lomen. “If they have a doula, think of that doula as just part of the team.”

Not all medical staff might know what a doula is or the role they play in birth. Emanate Health Director of Labor and Delivery Judy Chacon encourages patients to share their birth plans with physicians ahead of time, even if it’s not the one they ultimately deliver their baby with.

“We can always have this available for the physician that's going to be delivering this patient and try to make it where it's a collaborative effort to meet the needs of the patient,” Chacon said.

Postpartum Visits

You did it! There's a baby.

Doulas can return to your home to answer any questions you might have about breastfeeding, baby's health, your healing body, mental health — and they might even stock your freezer with padsicles.

Some doulas are exclusively postpartum-focused.

A doula might also just stop by to watch the baby and provide a little relief — maybe long enough for you to even take an uninterrupted shower!

A woman in a mustard yellow long-sleeved shirt sits with her infant son. To her right is a pregnant woman in a blue plaid shirt and standing to her right is a woman with black leggings on holding an infant. The wall behind them is painted olive and cream with a large gold sun.
Erika Moore, Farah Kolker and Andrea Orrego gather at Kindred Space in pre-pandemic times to ask questions, share their experiences and get advice about pregnancy and motherhood.
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Mariana Dale/LAist
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LAist
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"My doula has visited me several times, brought food, washed dishes, checked on the baby, binded my belly and ensured that I was doing well mentally and emotionally (postpartum anxiety and depression, not here!)," mom La Mikia Castillo told us. "I am so grateful for her support during this critical stage as I transition into motherhood with a newborn."

Other postpartum services doulas can offer include placenta encapsulation (arranged ahead of time), sleep consultation and help with breastfeeding.

When the spotlight shifts to the baby— how much they weigh, what they’re eating, if everyone can hold them— doulas focus on the person who gave birth.

Lynn said they’re the ones asking “How’s your bleeding? Have you been able to poo? Have you been able to pee?... How are you eating? How are your boobs feeling? How is your body feeling?”

And then springing into action with help where needed. Doulas can be the “resource of resources.”

“There's a lot of different things to navigate,” Lynn said. “Some of my work is supporting those folks and helping them find the resources they need and deserve.

A woman with curled turquoise hair holds up a round blue plastic device in her right hand and holds her left hand to her breast. Another woman with a black and white checked shirt sits to her right and another sits on a couch with an infant in her arms.
Doula Lauren Archer shows new mothers a lactation massager, which helps relieve plugged ducts at Village Birth in Eagle Rock before the pandemic.
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Samanta Helou for LAist
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Several of the doulas LAist talked to said they stay in touch with clients as their babies grow up.

“I'm very big on creating community,” Merino said. “Doula work doesn't just end after the baby is born, or after whatever happens with the pregnancy.”

Is There Any Sort of Doula Certification?

There are local and national organizations that certify doulas. Usually the certifications require several days of training in areas like childbirth education, attending births, breastfeeding, and providing physical and emotional support. Programs can also require continuing education and recertification after a certain number of years.

Some doula trainings do not offer a certificate, and some doulas might choose not to seek a program that does.

Long Beach Doula Stevie Merino co-founded the Birthworkers of Color Collective and said there are questions within the birthworker community about who are considered the gatekeepers of birthing information and as a result, who is able to offer services.

A woman with medium-light skin tone, dark brown hair in a bun with bangs, red lipstick and pearl earrings wears a white tank top and looks directly into the camera. Behind her is a yellow wall with shelves and large text that reads "Birthworkers of Color Collective" in black Old English-style font.
Stevie Merino has been a doula for more than a decade and co-founded the Birthworkers of Color Collective in Long Beach.
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Brian Feinzimer
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LAist
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How Much Does This Cost?

Each doula sets their own rate for attending the birth and prenatal and postpartum visits. That range in Los Angeles is typically from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.

Doulas said they take a variety of payments from traditional cash or card to apps like Venmo and barter for goods or services.

“Even if you think you can not afford it, ask for a sliding scale,” wrote doula Sarah Pinder. “Many of us offer and insist on it.”

Some doulas work through a nonprofit organization or independently to provide free or low-cost services to low-income families. In addition to typical doula services, these community-based doulas can offer referrals to other resources.

For example, the L.A. County Department of Public Health has a program that provides free doula services to Black women in parts of the county with the largest numbers of Black infant deaths.

What is Medi-Cal?
  • Medi-Cal is California’s public healthcare program for low-income residents and pregnant people. In other states, this program is called Medicaid. More than 15 million people were enrolled across California as of October 2023.

  • Find out how to apply online.

Is Health Insurance Going To Pay For Any Of This?

This was the most frequent question we received. The short answer is: probably not — unless you get health insurance through Medi-Cal.

California and a dozen other states now provide access to doulas through Medicaid. Expansion is underway in ten other states as of January 2024, according to the National Health Law Program.

Here's what we heard from several of California's largest health care insurers.

A woman with short dark brown hair and glasses holds an infant to her chest.
Nix Grover breast feeds her baby at the fourth trimester support group organized by Village Birth in Eagle Rock before the pandemic.
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Samanta Helou for LAist
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Kaiser, and UnitedHealthCare told us they do not currently cover doula services for non-Medi-Cal members.

“Hiring a doula for additional labor and delivery support is an optional service that some patients may elect to arrange for themselves,” said Kaiser Permanente spokesperson Terry Kanakri in an email.

UnitedHealthCare spokesperson said while the organization doesn’t cover doula services, people with a health savings account could apply that money toward a doula.

Blue Shield of California offers doula support to some members through maternal healthcare company Mahmee.

California's health insurance program for low-income families, Medi-Cal, started covering full-spectrum doula support in January 2023.

The majority of Medi-Cal enrollees participate in a managed care plan and receive services through a single provider network. We talked to representatives from two of L.A.’s largest provider networks— Health Net Community Solutions Inc. and L.A. Care Health Plan in late 2023 and both said they are working connecting members with doulas.

Doula benefit information for Medi-Cal members
  • Medi-Cal members who are pregnant or were pregnant in the last year are eligible for doula services, including to support pregnancies stillbirth, miscarriage, or abortion.

  • The Department of Health Care Services has issued a statewide standing recommendation for doula services, so people no longer need approval from an individual licensed provider to start working with a doula.

  • The majority of Medi-Cal enrollees participate in a managed care plan and receive services through a single provider network. Here are the main providers in L.A. County and how to learn more about their doula benefit:

    • Health Net: Call member services at 800-675-6110 (TTY: 711) to find a contracted doula nearby. If a preferred doula is not contracted with Health Net, members have the option to request a single case agreement. The plan also offers two other programs geared toward expectant and new parents: Start Smart for Baby and First Year of Life.
    • Kaiser Permanente: Call member services at 1-855-839-7613 and learn more online.
    • L.A. Care Health Plan: Members can call the number on the back of their ID card to request doula services and learn more online. The plan also offers a maternal health text messaging program.
  • Enrollees who participate in fee-for-service would work with a doula who then bills the state directly for their services.

  • DHCS has the answers to more frequently asked questions regarding doula services for Medi-Cal members here.

Where To Find A Doula In LA / Resources

You can look for a doula through local and national registries. Many doulas may also have their own websites and social media accounts.

Here are some Southern California resources. Many also offer support virtually:

African American Infant and Maternal Mortality (AAIMM) Prevention Initiative— a coalition including L.A. County Health Agency, community members, and local organizations that meets throughout the county and provides doula, breastfeeding, and fatherhood resources among others.

Baby Brilliance: doula, childbirth education, newborn care specialist services, and referrals.

Beauty For Ashes Maternal Wellness: perinatal support for BIPOC birthing people, pregnant and parenting teens, and doula mentorship.

Bini Birth: doula services, childbirth education classes, and doula trainings.

Birthworkers of Color Collective: directory of doulas, support for birth workers, and training based in Long Beach and also offering services virtually.

The Cradle Company: a pregnancy and postpartum resource center that offers doula services, baby care classes, lactation, and pediatric sleep consultation in Southern California with several locations including Pasadena and Newport Beach.

Doulas Association of Southern California: a membership organization that convenes offers meet-ups for doulas and maintains a directory of its members in more than a dozen regions from the Antelope Valley to San Diego County.

Frontline Doulas: a perinatal health program providing free doula services for qualified Black families in Los Angeles County, birth advocacy, training, and a doula hotline.

Joy in Birthing Foundation: pro bono doula services for low-income families and doula training.

Is something missing?
  • These resources were recommended by California birth workers and families. Have a suggestion? Email mdale@scpr.org.

Kindred Space LA: birth center, doula support, midwifery, childbirth education classes, lactation consulting support groups, and birth worker training based in South L.A.

LOOM: pregnancy, postpartum, sexual and reproductive health education.

Los Angeles Birth Partners: birth and postpartum doula services, referrals childbirth and newborn education, lactation education, and consultations.

The Pump Station: doula referrals, parent-and-me classes, lactation education and support based in Santa Monica.

Village Birth: childbirth education classes, doula services and support groups based in Pasadena.

Strength Based Community Change: This Southern California organization runs a community-based doula program that provides no-cost support to low-income and underserved birthing people, including teens.

About This Series

National/International resources

Black Women Birthing Justice: advocacy group, Black doula directory.

Childbirth and Postpartum Professional Association (CAPPA): doula, childbirth and lactation training, certification, doula and educator directory.

DONA International: doula training, certification, doula directory.

Doula Trainings International: doula trainings, certification, doula directory.

Sista Midwife Productions: training and online directory of Black doulas and midwives.

Further Reading

Birthing People's Bill of Rights: a guide to advocating for yourself in hospital and health care settings during the pandemic, created by California birth workers, legal experts, maternal and child health advocates.

A birth plan template in many languages: March of Dimes's birth plan template is available in 14 languages including Arabic, Armenian, English, Farsi, Korean, Mixteca Baja, Spanish, Tagalog, Vietnamese, simplified and traditional Chinese.

Irth: An app where Black and brown birthing parents review prenatal, birthing, postpartum, and pediatric care. “All of our reviews are read by a panel of volunteers,” founder Kimberly Seals Allers told NPR. “They have to be checked for quality before they're released into the searchable database.”

What To Ask When Deciding Which Doula To Hire

First, ask yourself some questions:

  • What do you want out of your experience with a doula?
  • Is your doula's personal background a factor?
  • Do you want to work with someone who can support you in breastfeeding or who provides a specific service?
  • Are there family or cultural traditions that you want to include in your birth plan?
  • How much can you afford to pay?

Consider interviewing several doulas (three is a good number). You might ask questions like: What is your experience? What services do you offer?

"Find someone who you like to talk to and you feel comfortable with, someone who inspires you and makes you feel confident and trusting in yourself!" wrote doula Rebecca Belenky. "Most people feel a lot of judgment from others during pregnancy and parenting, you should not feel judgment from your doula as well."

Orange County doulas Marlee and Megan Malone-Franklin suggest asking about a doula's journey to birth work and how they approach working with partners and care providers.

Then, back to the personal questions: Does the doula make you feel safe? Can you imagine being vulnerable in front of them?

Do we have a connection? Do you feel safe with me? Do you feel like you can be vulnerable? You are inviting another person into some of the most intimate moments of your life.
— Mikaela Lynn, perinatal care specialist

"Each doula has a different personality and skill set," wrote Darla Burns, a doula from Santa Clarita. "Who could you imagine being in that intimate space when you are in pain? Who would comfort you the best? It's not just about experience and price, there has to be a connection with the doula."

Merino often says this in her potential client interviews: “If it's not a strong Yes, it's probably a No.”

“So often during pregnancy, we don't get to choose a lot of things,” Merino said. “And so the things that we can choose, like who is going to be supporting us, it should be a choice that feels good.”

Can I Hear Some Real Life Stories Of What It’s Like?

Yes! Many of the people who wrote us back said we could share their stories. The overall takeaway was that their doulas helped keep them calm, advocated for their health and provided a valuable source of information.

Giving Birth In A Pandemic Can Be Isolating. It Doesn't Have To Be

In early 2020, then-Alhambra couple Sheila Thomas and Charles Lyles knew the birth of their second child would be different because of coronavirus.

Thomas, a licensed clinical psychologist, said she sought out a doula because she was among those who experienced postpartum anxiety when her first son was born.

A phone screenshot shows a woman's face in the lower left corner and another woman in a blue hospital gown standing in a hospital room.
Doula Monique Cowan listens while client Sheila Thomas dances during a prep session conducted on FaceTime
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Courtesy of Monique Cowan
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Her mind raced with uncontrolled thoughts like "I'm the only one who could keep this baby alive. Nobody else will be able to keep this baby alive. So that means that I have to stay awake — all the time. I cannot sleep. There will be no sleeping because I'm the only one. All other people, they might let him die. For real. They probably want him to die."

"Honestly, like it goes that bad," Thomas said.

During a routine prenatal visit on May 7, several days before her due date, a doctor told Thomas labor would have to be induced that day because her amniotic fluid was low.

"And then I flipped out," Thomas said. "[I said], let me call the doula who can listen to what it is you're saying, and then tell me later when my mind is clear."

Once at the hospital her birth plan went into action — it asked that the hospital staff get her permission before touching her body and performing procedures.

The plan also called for music.

Thomas had planned to listen to a playlist of '90s R&B, but in the moment the song that felt right was Juvenile's "Back That Thang Up" — the uncensored version.

Thomas danced in her light blue hospital gown, IV trailing from her left hand, and Cowan laughed with them over FaceTime.

When the pain intensified, Cowan guided Lyles as he used his hands to massage his wife's sacrum and glute muscles.

"She inspired me to do it, to help her out, which helped me feel like I was actually being useful," Lyles said.

Their son Ezra was born at 9:36 p.m. on May 7, 2020 about an hour after the hospital room dance party.

When we talked later that month, the network of support surrounding Thomas included her husband, family, a therapist, public health programs, and her doula, who, for now, is a text message or phone call away.

"I still have thoughts like I'm the only one that can keep them alive, but now I can say that's unrealistic," Thomas said. "There's other people here."

An Empowered Orange County Father

Orange County dad Jose Escobar said he was skeptical about his wife Elizabeth's desire to have a doula when she was pregnant with their son in 2016.

A man in a blue shirt and glasses holds the forearms of a woman in a black shirt. Another woman in a long-sleeved grey shirt is in the foreground looking at them.
Jose Escobar supports his wife as their doula looks on during the birth of their son in December 2016. "I was able to, to know what the process was, what to expect, how to look at, you know, Elizabeth and see if she's OK."
(
Courtesy of Jose Escobar
)

But as they worked through their doula's "birth boot camp" program, he started to change his mind.

"The knowledge, methods and preparedness they provide was so valuable for us to feel confident during pregnancy and feel more ready during labor," he said.

When Elizabeth was diagnosed with gestational diabetes, their doula accompanied her to her appointments with a dietician. When their plan to have their baby at a birthing center went out the window during a 33-hour labor, their doula followed them to the hospital, too.

"I get there and I'm being bombarded with just like, nurses and there was like, student nurses or student doctors and all just kind of stuff," Elizabeth said. Their doula was a buffer.

Jose said he felt empowered to have a role in the birth of their son whether it was coaching Elizabeth through breathing exercises or helping manage pain.

"That was major for me,” he said, “just knowing what to expect and how to have the right frame of mind to be able to help my wife."

What questions do you have about early childhood development and education?
What do you want to know about kids ages 0-5 and those who care for them in Southern California?

Updated February 1, 2023 at 5:04 PM PST
This guide has been updated to reflect changes to Medi-Cal.
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