$120,880/year
Master's or Doctoral degree
38% (2022-2032)
No
Hospitals, birth centers, private practices
January 2025
Sarah Mitchell, DNP, CNM: Director of Midwifery Services
What is a Nurse Midwife?
Certified Nurse Midwives (CNMs) are advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) who specialize in women’s reproductive health, pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum care, and newborn care. CNMs provide comprehensive healthcare to women across the lifespan, including annual exams, contraception counseling, prenatal care, labor and delivery management, and primary care services. Unlike obstetricians who are physicians trained in surgical intervention, CNMs focus on physiologic (normal) birth and use a holistic, patient-centered approach emphasizing minimal intervention when appropriate.
CNMs practice independently in most states, managing low-risk pregnancies and births without physician oversight. They attend births in hospitals, freestanding birth centers, and home settings. When complications arise requiring surgical intervention (cesarean section) or high-risk obstetric management, CNMs collaborate with or refer to obstetricians while continuing to provide supportive care.
Why Become a Nurse Midwife?
Meaningful, Life-Changing Work:
CNMs participate in one of life's most profound experiences, supporting women and families during pregnancy and birth. Witnessing new life, empowering women through childbirth, and building relationships across reproductive journeys provides exceptional fulfillment.
Excellent Compensation and Job Security:
With median salaries around $120,880 and 38% projected job growth through 2032, nurse midwifery offers strong financial rewards and employment security. Demand stems from physician shortages in obstetrics, growing preference for midwifery care, and healthcare system cost pressures favoring midwives.
Autonomy and Independent Practice:
CNMs enjoy significant professional autonomy, managing pregnancies and births independently in most states. This independence appeals to nurses seeking to make clinical decisions, develop patient relationships, and practice with minimal supervision.
Diverse Practice Settings:
CNMs work in hospitals, birth centers, private midwifery practices, community health clinics, and home birth services. This variety allows finding practice environments matching personal philosophy about childbirth and desired lifestyle.
Work-Life Balance Options:
While on-call for births creates unpredictability, many CNMs structure practices allowing reasonable work-life balance. Some work in hospital laborist models with scheduled shifts rather than 24/7 on-call. Others practice part-time or share call with midwife partners.
Patient-Centered Care Philosophy:
Midwifery emphasizes supporting physiologic birth, shared decision-making, and holistic care addressing physical, emotional, and social aspects of women's health. This philosophy attracts nurses who value patient autonomy and minimal intervention when safe.
Nurse midwifery combines clinical expertise with advocacy for women’s health, offering intellectually engaging work with exceptional meaning and impact.
Three Spheres of CNS Influence
What Nurse Midwives Do
In the next section, you’ll learn about the core responsibilities, daily activities, and areas of impact that define a NE—across patient care, nursing practice, and healthcare systems.
Daily Responsibilities and Tasks
Certified Nurse Midwives provide comprehensive women’s healthcare across the reproductive lifespan, with particular focus on pregnancy, birth, and postpartum care.
Well-Woman Care and Primary Health Services
Annual Examinations and Preventive Care
CNMs perform annual gynecological exams including pelvic exams, Pap smears, breast exams, and sexual health screenings. They assess overall health, screen for conditions like hypertension and diabetes, provide health education, and manage chronic conditions within scope of practice.
Contraception Counseling and Management
CNMs counsel women on contraceptive options (pills, IUDs, implants, barrier methods, natural family planning), prescribe contraceptives, insert and remove IUDs and implants, and support women’s reproductive choices.
Preconception Counseling
CNMs help women prepare for pregnancy by optimizing health, managing chronic conditions, prescribing prenatal vitamins, addressing risk factors, and providing genetic counseling referrals when indicated.
Pregnancy Care (Prenatal, Labor/Birth, Postpartum)
Prenatal Care
CNMs provide comprehensive prenatal care throughout pregnancy, typically seeing patients monthly until 28 weeks, biweekly until 36 weeks, then weekly until birth. Prenatal visits include:
- Physical assessment (blood pressure, weight, fundal height, fetal heart tones)
- Ordering and interpreting lab tests and ultrasounds
- Screening for gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, and other complications
- Nutrition counseling and lifestyle guidance
- Birth planning and education
- Addressing concerns and questions
- Monitoring fetal growth and well-being
Labor and Delivery Management
CNMs manage normal labor and birth, including:
- Assessing labor progression (cervical dilation, effacement, fetal descent)
- Providing continuous labor support and comfort measures
- Using non-pharmacologic pain management (positioning, hydrotherapy, massage)
- Administering pain medications including epidural coordination
- Performing amniotomy (artificial rupture of membranes) when appropriate
- Managing second stage labor (pushing and birth)
- Performing episiotomy if necessary (though CNMs minimize this intervention)
- Repairing perineal lacerations
- Managing third stage labor (placenta delivery)
- Immediate newborn assessment and care
- Facilitating skin-to-skin contact and initial breastfeeding
CNMs attend births in hospitals (most common), freestanding birth centers, and homes (depending on state regulations and practice preference).
Recognition and Management of Complications
CNMs identify complications requiring physician intervention:
- Fetal distress or concerning fetal heart rate patterns
- Failure to progress in labor
- Hemorrhage
- Hypertensive emergencies (severe preeclampsia, eclampsia)
- Malpresentation (breech, transverse lie)
- Placental complications (placenta previa, abruption)
When complications arise, CNMs collaborate with obstetricians, coordinate transfers of care, and continue providing supportive care.
Postpartum Care
CNMs provide postpartum follow-up including:
- Physical recovery assessment (uterine involution, perineal healing, bleeding)
- Breastfeeding support and troubleshooting
- Emotional health screening (postpartum depression, anxiety)
- Contraception counseling
- Return to activity and exercise guidance
- Newborn care education
Newborn Care
CNMs provide immediate newborn care after birth and initial pediatric care in some settings:
- APGAR scoring and initial assessment
- Administering vitamin K and eye prophylaxis
- Facilitating early breastfeeding
- Newborn screening and hearing tests
- Circumcision (some CNMs perform this procedure)
- Well-baby checks during immediate postpartum period
Gynecological Care
Treatment of Common Conditions
CNMs diagnose and treat conditions including:
- Urinary tract infections
- Vaginal infections (yeast, bacterial vaginosis)
- Sexually transmitted infections
- Menstrual irregularities
- Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
- Endometriosis
- Menopausal symptoms
Menopause Management
CNMs provide menopause care including symptom management, hormone therapy counseling and prescription, bone health assessment, and cardiovascular risk reduction.
Specializations and Practice Models
Hospital-Based Practice:
Most common model. CNMs work as hospital employees or contracted midwifery groups attending births in labor and delivery units. May work scheduled shifts (laborist model) or traditional call model.
Birth Center Practice:
CNMs practice in freestanding birth centers providing out-of-hospital birth option for low-risk women. Emphasis on minimal intervention, family-centered care, and physiologic birth support.
Home Birth Practice:
Some CNMs attend planned home births for carefully screened low-risk women. Requires significant autonomy, emergency preparedness, and collaborative physician relationships for transfers.
Group Practice/Private Practice:
CNMs establish or join private midwifery practices providing comprehensive women’s health and maternity care. Practice autonomously or collaboratively with physicians.
Community Health Centers:
CNMs provide women’s health services to underserved populations in federally qualified health centers, offering prenatal care, family planning, and primary care.
Military and Veterans Affairs:
CNMs serve military families and veterans providing women’s health services in military treatment facilities and VA hospitals.
What’s Next?
Work Environment
This section covers hospitals, specialty clinics, academic environments, and leadership roles—helping you visualize your future workplace.
Work Environment
Where CNMs Work and What to Expect
Certified Nurse Midwives practice across diverse settings, each offering distinct work conditions and birth philosophies.
Primary Work Settings:
-
Hospitals (Largest Employer): Approximately 60-70% of CNMs work in hospital settings. Hospital practice offers resources for emergency intervention, collaborative relationships with obstetricians, and infrastructure support (nurses, anesthesia, operating rooms). Hospital CNMs may work as employees or independent contractors. Work schedules vary from on-call models (24/7 availability for assigned patients) to laborist shifts (scheduled 12-24 hour shifts attending any births during that time).
-
Birth Centers (Growing Sector): Freestanding birth centers provide homelike environments for low-risk births outside hospitals. Birth center CNMs emphasize physiologic birth, minimal intervention, and family-centered care. Typically on-call schedules with backup CNM coverage. Requires emergency transfer protocols with nearby hospitals.
-
Private Midwifery Practices: Some CNMs establish or join private practices providing prenatal care in office settings and attending births in hospitals or birth centers. Offers practice autonomy and business ownership opportunities. Requires business management skills and malpractice insurance navigation.
-
Community Health Clinics: Federally qualified health centers employ CNMs providing women's health services including prenatal care (with hospital birth), family planning, and primary care to underserved populations. Typically Monday-Friday schedules without birth attendance in some models.
-
Home Birth Services: Small percentage of CNMs attend planned home births. Requires strong clinical skills, comfort with autonomy, emergency preparedness, and collaborative physician relationships. Most home birth CNMs maintain small caseloads (20-40 births annually).
-
Academic Positions: Experienced CNMs teach in nurse midwifery programs, combining clinical practice with academic responsibilities.
Typical Work Schedule
-
On-Call Model: Traditional midwifery practice involves being on-call for births 24/7, shared among midwife partners (e.g., one week on, one week off). Unpredictable sleep disruption and schedule flexibility required.
-
Laborist/Shift Model: Hospital-employed CNMs work scheduled shifts (typically 12-24 hours) attending any births during that shift. More predictable than on-call but still includes nights, weekends, and holidays.
-
Clinic-Based: Some CNMs practice in clinic settings providing prenatal and gynecological care without attending births (births managed by hospital midwives or physicians). Offers more regular schedules.
Physical and Mental Demands
-
Physical Demands: Moderate to high. Births require prolonged standing, hands-on support (holding birthing positions), physical stamina during long labors (sometimes 12-24+ hours), and occasional need for physical strength assisting with shoulder dystocia or other complications. Less physically demanding than bedside nursing but more than many APRN roles.
-
Mental and Emotional Demands: High responsibility managing labor and birth outcomes. Decision-making under pressure when complications arise. Emotional investment in patients and births creates both fulfillment and potential for grief when adverse outcomes occur. Managing on-call lifestyle stress and sleep deprivation.
Pros
-
Profoundly meaningful work: Participate in birth, life's most transformative event
-
Excellent compensation: $120,000+ with strong job security
-
Professional autonomy: Independent practice in most states
-
Patient relationships: Build deep connections through pregnancy and birth
-
Diverse practice options: Hospitals, birth centers, homes, clinics
-
Advocacy opportunities: Champion physiologic birth and women's health
Cons
-
Unpredictable schedule: On-call disrupts sleep and personal life
-
Liability stress: Malpractice concerns with birth outcomes
-
Emotional toll: Adverse outcomes (stillbirth, neonatal death) deeply affect midwives
-
Long education pathway: 6-8 years minimum from start to certification
-
Physical demands: Long labors require stamina
-
Scope limitations: Cannot perform cesarean sections; must transfer care for complications
What’s Next?
Salary & Job Outlook
Learn about average salaries, factors that influence compensation, and projected demand for Clinical Nurse Specialists.
Salary & Job Outlook
CNM Salary Overview
Certified Nurse Midwives earn salaries among the highest for APRNs, reflecting their advanced training and significant responsibility.
Median Annual Salary (2024 BLS):
$120,880
Hourly Wage
$58.12
Entry-Level (25th percentile):
$100,000-$108,000
Experienced (75th percentile):
$140,000-$155,000
Top Earners (90th percentile):
$165,000+
CNM salaries vary by geographic location, practice setting, years of experience, and practice volume.
Salary by Experience Level
Experience
Average Salary
Career Stage
New Graduate CNM (0-2 years)
$100,000-$110,000
Building competence, mentored practice
Early Career (3-5 years)
$110,000-$125,000
Confident independent practice
Mid-Career (6-10 years)
$120,000-$140,000
Experienced, possibly leadership roles
Experienced (11-15 years)
$135,000-$155,000
Expert clinician, potential practice owner
Late Career (16+ years)
$145,000-$175,000+
Senior clinician, director, or owner
Salary by Practice Setting
Setting
Average Salary
Work Environment
Hospital: Employee
$115,000-$135,000
Scheduled shifts or on-call, benefits package
Hospital: Contractor
$130,000-$160,000
Independent contractor, higher pay, no benefits
Private Practice: Owner
$120,000-$180,000+
Income depends on practice volume and expenses
Private Practice: Employee
$110,000-$130,000
Employed in established practice
Birth Center
$105,000-$130,000
Often lower volume than hospital
Home Birth Practice
$80,000-$140,000
Highly variable, depends on caseload
Community Health Center
$100,000-$120,000
Grant-funded, serve underserved populations
Academic/Faculty
$95,000-$125,000
Teaching plus clinical practice
Military
$100,000-$130,000 + benefits
Military pay structure plus housing allowances
Salary by Geographic Location (Top 10 States)
Setting
Average CNM Salary
Notes
California
$155,000-$175,000
Highest salaries, very high cost of living
New York
$135,000-$155,000
Urban areas higher (NYC metro)
Massachusetts
$130,000-$150,000
Strong midwifery presence
Washington
$128,000-$145,000
West Coast demand
Oregon
$125,000-$142,000
Progressive birth culture
Connecticut
$123,000-$140,000
High cost of living
New Jersey
$120,000-$138,000
Proximity to NYC
Minnesota
$118,000-$135,000
Strong healthcare systems
Colorado
$115,000-$135,000
Growing midwifery market
Illinois
$113,000-$132,000
Urban areas higher (Chicago)
Geographic variation reflects cost of living, demand for midwifery services, and state scope of practice regulations affecting CNM autonomy.
Additional Compensation
Call Pay:
Many practices pay stipends for being on-call ($100-$300 per 24-hour call period)
Birth Bonuses:
Some practices pay per birth attended ($500-$2,000 per birth)
Malpractice Insurance:
Employer-covered (typical) or CNM-responsibility (independent contractors, $15,000-$40,000 annually)
Signing Bonuses:
$5,000-$20,000 in high-demand areas
Benefits Package:
$30,000-$45,000 value (health insurance, retirement, CME allowance, malpractice coverage)
Job Outlook and Employment Projections
Current Employment:
Approximately 7,000 practicing CNMs nationwide
Projected Growth (2022-2032):
38% for all APRNs (much faster than average)
Annual Job Openings:
Estimated 400-600 CNM positions annually
Factors Driving CNM Demand
-
Obstetrician Shortage: Many areas, particularly rural communities, face obstetrician shortages. CNMs fill gaps in maternity care access. Some rural areas rely entirely on CNMs for obstetric services.
-
Cost-Effectiveness: Healthcare systems recognize CNMs provide high-quality care at lower cost than physician-only models. Midwifery care reduces cesarean rates, intervention rates, and overall costs while maintaining excellent outcomes for low-risk pregnancies.
-
Growing Consumer Preference: Increasing numbers of women seek midwifery care valuing the midwifery model emphasizing physiologic birth, continuous labor support, and minimal intervention. Birth centers and midwife-attended hospital births are growing.
-
Improved Birth Outcomes: Evidence demonstrates CNM care associates with lower cesarean rates, fewer interventions, higher breastfeeding rates, and high patient satisfaction for low-risk pregnancies, driving health system interest in midwifery integration.
-
Legislative Changes: More states granting CNMs full practice authority without physician supervision requirements increases practice opportunities and makes CNMs more attractive to employers.
-
Maternal Mortality Crisis: U.S. maternal mortality rates exceed other developed nations, creating urgency for improved maternity care models. Midwifery care contributes to reducing maternal mortality and morbidity.
Geographic Demand Patterns
Highest Demand:
- Rural areas with obstetrician shortages
- Urban areas with progressive birth culture (Pacific Northwest, Northeast, California)
- Underserved communities needing maternity care access
- States with full practice authority for CNMs
- Areas with established birth center movement
Practice Opportunity Considerations:
- State scope of practice laws significantly affect CNM autonomy and practice models
- Some states require physician collaboration or supervision
- Prescriptive authority varies by state
- Hospital credentialing and privileging processes vary
What’s Next?
How to Become a Nurse Midwife
This section outlines education requirements, licensure, certification, and experience needed to become a CNS.
Educational Pathway Timeline
Total Time:
6-8 years
Becoming a CNM requires sequential education from RN licensure through graduate midwifery education.
Step 1
Earn Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN): 4 years
Prerequisites require high school diploma/GED with strong science grades. Accelerated BSN programs accept students with bachelor’s degrees in other fields (12-18 months).
BSN curriculum includes nursing fundamentals, anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology, health assessment, medical-surgical nursing, maternal-newborn (obstetrics), pediatrics, psychiatric nursing, community health, and extensive clinical rotations.
Pass the National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN) to obtain RN license.
Step 2
Gain Nursing Experience: 1-3 years (Strongly Recommended)
While some CNM programs accept new graduates, most require or strongly prefer nursing experience, particularly in labor and delivery, postpartum, or women’s health.
Recommended Experience:
- Labor and delivery nursing (most valuable)
- Postpartum/mother-baby nursing
- Women's health clinic nursing
- Family planning clinic experience
Why Experience Matters:
- Builds confidence in obstetric emergencies and normal birth
- Provides exposure to complications and interventions
- Establishes comfort with newborns and breastfeeding support
- Creates realistic understanding of hospital birth culture
- Strengthens clinical assessment skills
- Most competitive CNM program applicants have 2-5 years labor and delivery experience
Step 3
Complete Nurse Midwifery Graduate Program: 2-3 years
Degree Options:
-
Master of Science in Nursing (MSN): Nurse Midwifery: 2-2.5 years full-time
-
Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP): Nurse Midwifery: 3-4 years post-BSN
Current Requirement: Master’s degree (MSN) currently acceptable. However, the profession is transitioning toward DNP as entry-level requirement (similar to nurse anesthesia). Check individual program requirements.
Admission Requirements:
- Active RN license
- BSN from accredited program (GPA typically 3.0-3.5+)
- Nursing experience (varies by program; 1-2 years minimum, often prefer more)
- GRE scores (some programs waiving)
- Professional references
- Personal statement addressing commitment to midwifery
- Interview
Program Competitiveness: CNM programs are selective with acceptance rates typically 20-40%. Strong academic record, relevant experience, and compelling personal statement essential.
Curriculum Structure:
Didactic Coursework:
- Advanced pathophysiology
- Advanced pharmacology
- Advanced health assessment (including gynecological and obstetric exams)
- Reproductive physiology
- Normal pregnancy, labor, birth, and postpartum
- Complications of pregnancy and birth
- High-risk obstetrics
- Neonatal assessment and care
- Women's health across lifespan
- Gynecological conditions and treatment
- Contraception and family planning
- Primary care for women
- Professional, legal, and ethical issues in midwifery
Clinical Practicum:
- Minimum requirements vary by program but typically include:
- Women’s health/primary care: 200-300 hours
- Prenatal care: 100-150 continuity patients (following through pregnancy, birth, postpartum)
- Labor and birth: 40-60 births attended as primary midwife
- Postpartum care
- Newborn care
- Clinical rotations in hospitals, birth centers, clinics, and possibly home birth services
- Supervised by preceptors (practicing CNMs and occasionally physicians)
- Progressive independence throughout clinical training
Program Costs: $40,000-$100,000+ depending on institution (public vs. private, in-state vs. out-of-state). Many students work part-time as RNs during coursework but full-time clinical rotations typically preclude significant employment.
Step 4
Pass National Certification Examination
American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB) Certification Exam
Eligibility: Graduation from accredited nurse midwifery program
Exam Details:
- Computer-based, 175 multiple-choice questions
- 3.5 hours
- Content areas: antepartum, intrapartum, postpartum, newborn care, gynecology/women’s health, primary care
- Pass rate: Approximately 85-90% for first-time takers
Preparation: Most graduates study 200+ hours using review courses, practice exams, and study guides. Taking exam soon after graduation while knowledge is fresh improves pass rates.
Step 5
Obtain State Licensure/Recognition
After passing AMCB exam, apply for APRN licensure through state board of nursing.
State Requirements Vary:
- Some states grant APRN licensure for CNMs
- Others recognize CNMs under RN license with advanced practice designation
- Prescriptive authority requirements differ (DEA number, controlled substance authority)
- Some states require physician collaboration agreements; others grant full practice authority
Research specific state requirements before relocating or establishing practice.
Step 6
Obtain Hospital Privileges and Malpractice Insurance
-
Hospital Credentialing: CNMs attending hospital births must apply for privileges through hospital medical staff credentialing process. Requirements vary but typically include verification of education, certification, references, and malpractice insurance.
-
Malpractice Insurance: Essential for practice. Employers often provide coverage. Independent practitioners purchase individual policies ($15,000-$40,000 annually depending on state, claims history, and practice volume).
Continuing Education and Recertification
AMCB Certification Renewal (Every 5 years):
- Document 1,000 clinical practice hours over 5 years
- Complete 50 continuing education contact hours
- Maintain active RN license
- Pay renewal fees
OR retake certification examination
Mandatory Skills Workshops: Many CNMs maintain skills through:
- Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) certification
- Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS)
- Emergency obstetric drills and simulation training
What’s Next?
Career Path and Advancement
Understand advancement opportunities and long-term growth potential.
Career Progression Timeline
Years 1-2
New Graduate CNM
$100,000-$110,000.
Begin practice typically in hospital or established midwifery practice with mentorship. Focus on building clinical competence, speed, and confidence. Many new CNMs appreciate structured environments with backup support while developing skills.
Years 3-7
Experienced CNM
$115,000-$130,000.
Confident independent practitioner. May begin taking more complex patients, serving as preceptor for CNM students, or exploring different practice settings. Some CNMs transition from hospital to birth center or vice versa.
Years 8-15
Advanced Practice CNM
$130,000-$150,000.
Expert clinician. May pursue leadership roles, practice ownership, or specialization. Serve as clinical expert for colleagues, participate in quality improvement initiatives, or develop innovative practice models.
Senior CNM
$145,000-$175,000+.
Practice owner, director of midwifery services, or senior clinician mentoring newer midwives. Some transition to academic roles, consulting, or policy advocacy.
Leadership and Practice Ownership
Director of Midwifery Services:
Lead hospital midwifery program or birth center operations. Oversee CNM staff, develop protocols, ensure quality outcomes, coordinate physician collaboration, and manage budgets. Requires administrative skills beyond clinical expertise. Salary: $140,000-$180,000.
Practice Owner:
Establish or purchase midwifery practice. Manage business operations, hire staff, negotiate contracts, and oversee quality of care. Significant financial upside but also business risk and administrative burden. Income potential: $150,000-$250,000+ depending on practice volume and efficiency.
Birth Center Owner/Director:
Own and operate freestanding birth center. Requires business acumen, regulatory compliance knowledge, and vision for creating ideal birth environment. Income highly variable: $120,000-$200,000+.
Academic and Education Paths
CNM Program Faculty:
Teach in nurse midwifery graduate programs. Requires master’s or doctorate and clinical expertise. Combination of classroom teaching, clinical supervision, and scholarly work. Salary: $90,000-$120,000 (academic salaries typically lower than clinical but offer different lifestyle).
Clinical Preceptor:
Supervise CNM students during clinical rotations while maintaining clinical practice. Many practices provide stipends ($3,000-$8,000 per student) for preceptorship.
Advocacy and Policy Work
Professional Organization Leadership:
Serve in leadership roles for American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM), state midwifery associations, or related organizations. Typically volunteer or part-time positions influencing policy and profession.
Legislative Advocacy:
Work on scope of practice expansion, improving midwifery regulations, and advancing maternity care policy. Some CNMs transition to full-time health policy roles.
Specialized Practice
High-Risk Obstetrics Consultation:
Some experienced CNMs work in maternal-fetal medicine practices providing co-management for high-risk pregnancies alongside perinatologists.
Reproductive Health Specialist:
Focus primarily on family planning, contraception services, abortion care (where legal and within scope), and preconception counseling.
Global Health/Medical Missions:
Provide midwifery care in underserved international settings through organizations like Midwives for Haiti, Helping Babies Breathe, or Doctors Without Borders.
What’s Next?
Skills and Personality Traits
In the next section, you’ll discover the clinical, leadership, communication, and analytical skills that top CNS professionals rely on every day.
Essential Skills for Nurse Midwives
Clinical Competencies:
Expert Assessment Skills:
Ability to distinguish normal from abnormal in pregnancy, labor, and women’s health. Recognizing subtle signs of complications requiring intervention or consultation. Skilled in vaginal exams, Leopold’s maneuvers, fetal heart rate interpretation, and physical assessment.
Birth Attendance Expertise:
Technical skills managing labor progress, supporting physiologic birth, performing perineal repair, managing shoulder dystocia, postpartum hemorrhage response, and neonatal resuscitation.
Clinical Decision-Making:
Sound judgment determining when to provide expectant management versus intervention, when to consult obstetricians, and when emergent transfer of care is necessary. Risk assessment and management.
Pharmacology Knowledge:
Understanding medications used in pregnancy, labor, and women’s health. Prescribing safely during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
Counseling and Education Skills:
Effectively teaching about pregnancy, labor, parenting, contraception, and health maintenance. Tailoring education to diverse literacy levels and cultural backgrounds.
Emergency Response:
Remaining calm and effective during obstetric emergencies (hemorrhage, shoulder dystocia, eclampsia, fetal distress). Quick decision-making under pressure.
Collaboration and Consultation:
Working effectively with obstetricians, pediatricians, anesthesiologists, and nursing staff. Knowing when and how to consult or transfer care.
Personality Characteristics
Patience and Presence:
Labor often unfolds slowly over many hours. CNMs must patiently support physiologic processes without rushing, providing continuous reassuring presence through long labors.
Emotional Resilience:
Coping with adverse outcomes (stillbirth, maternal death, severe complications) while continuing to provide compassionate care. Managing on-call stress and sleep deprivation.
Advocacy and Empowerment:
Commitment to supporting women’s autonomy, informed decision-making, and birth preferences while ensuring safety. Balancing respect for individual choices with clinical expertise.
Flexibility and Adaptability:
Birth is unpredictable. CNMs must adapt to changing situations, unexpected complications, and patients’ evolving needs during labor.
Cultural Humility:
Respecting diverse beliefs about pregnancy, birth, modesty, family involvement, and healthcare. Adapting care to honor cultural practices while ensuring safety.
Passion for Physiologic Birth:
Belief in the body’s ability to birth without unnecessary intervention. Commitment to evidence-based practice supporting normal birth while recognizing when intervention is necessary.
Work-Life Balance Skills:
Lifelong Learning:
Lifelong Learning:
Staying current with evolving evidence in obstetrics, attending workshops maintaining emergency skills, and pursuing professional development.
What’s Next?
Similar and Related Careers
If you’re exploring multiple paths in advanced nursing, this section introduces roles similar to a CNS, helping you compare responsibilities, education, and career focus.
Alternative Healthcare Careers to Consider
If nurse midwife interests you but concerns exist about specific aspects, consider related careers:
Nurse Practitioner: Women's Health (WHNP)
Education: MSN or DNP (6-8 years total)
Median Salary: $118,000-$128,000
Focus on women’s health across lifespan (gynecology, contraception, menopause) without birth attendance. More predictable schedule without on-call births. Cannot independently manage labor and delivery.
Labor and Delivery Nurse
Education: ADN or BSN (2-4 years)
Median Salary: $75,000-$90,000
Support women during labor, monitor fetal well-being, assist with births, provide immediate newborn care. Work under physician or midwife direction. Faster education pathway, lower salary, less autonomy than CNM.
Obstetrician-Gynecologist (MD/DO)
Education: 12-14 years (undergrad + medical school + residency)
Median Salary: $280,000-$320,000
Physician specializing in women’s health and obstetrics. Perform cesarean sections and gynecologic surgery. Higher income and broader scope than CNM but longer, more expensive education and higher malpractice costs.
Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP)
Education: MSN or DNP
Median Salary: $113,000-$123,000
Provide primary care to all ages. Can provide some prenatal care but typically do not attend births. More general practice, less specialization than CNM.
Doula
Education: Short certification courses (weeks to months)
Median Salary: $25,000-$50,000 (often part-time)
Provide non-medical labor support, education, and advocacy. Attend births alongside medical providers. No medical intervention role. Lower income and education requirements.
Lactation Consultant (IBCLC)
Education: Varies; certification process
Median Salary: $50,000-$75,000
Specialize in breastfeeding support and education. Often works in hospitals, clinics, or private practice. Less demanding than CNM but narrower scope and lower income.
Postpartum Nurse
Education: ADN or BSN
Median Salary: $70,000-$85,000
Care for mothers and newborns after birth. Support recovery, breastfeeding initiation, newborn care teaching. Standard nursing schedule without on-call for births.
What’s Next?
Frequently Asked Questions
Still have questions? The final section addresses common concerns and practical questions about becoming and working as a Clinical Nurse Specialist.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a midwife and a nurse midwife?
In the U.S., “midwife” is a general term encompassing several credentials. Certified Nurse Midwives (CNMs) are registered nurses with graduate degrees in midwifery, certified by the American Midwifery Certification Board. Certified Midwives (CMs) have similar education and certification but are not nurses (hold non-nursing bachelor’s degrees). Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs) have different training pathway focused on out-of-hospital birth, typically without nursing background. CNMs have broadest scope of practice, work in all settings, and are recognized in all 50 states. When people say “nurse midwife,” they specifically mean CNM.
Do nurse midwives deliver babies in hospitals?
Yes. Most CNMs practice in hospitals, attending 60-70% of all midwife-attended births. Hospital CNMs manage labor and vaginal delivery for low-risk patients, working collaboratively with obstetricians who provide backup for complications requiring cesarean section or other surgical intervention.
Can nurse midwives perform C-sections?
No. CNMs cannot perform cesarean sections as this is a surgical procedure requiring physician training. When cesarean delivery becomes necessary, obstetricians perform the surgery while CNMs may assist or provide supportive care. This scope limitation is one difference between midwives and obstetricians.
How much do nurse midwives make compared to OB-GYNs?
CNMs earn substantially less than obstetricians. CNM median salary is approximately $120,880 while obstetrician-gynecologists earn $280,000-$320,000 median. However, CNMs require 6-8 years education versus 12-14 years for physicians, accumulate less educational debt ($60,000-$100,000 vs. $200,000-$400,000), and have lower malpractice insurance costs. Per year of education, CNM return on investment is favorable.
Is being a nurse midwife stressful?
Yes, midwifery involves significant stress from on-call lifestyle disrupting sleep and personal time, high-stakes responsibility for maternal and fetal outcomes, liability concerns, and emotional impact of adverse outcomes. However, most CNMs report high job satisfaction, finding the meaningful work, patient relationships, and privilege of attending births outweigh the stresses. Work-life balance varies dramatically by practice model (shift work vs. on-call, hospital vs. birth center).
Do I need labor and delivery experience to become a CNM?
Not always formally required, but strongly recommended. Most competitive CNM programs prefer applicants with labor and delivery nursing experience. This experience builds relevant skills, demonstrates commitment to midwifery, and provides realistic understanding of birth. Some programs admit new graduate nurses, but these students often find clinical training more challenging without prior obstetric nursing foundation. 1-3 years labor and delivery experience significantly strengthens applications and clinical success.
What’s Next?
Overview
The overview brings together key highlights, role impact, and career context—making it a helpful starting point whether you’re just beginning or refining your decision.