Colorado Code § 12-225-104

Requirement for registration with the division - annual fee - grounds for revocation
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) Every direct-entry midwife shall register with the division by applying to
the director in the form and manner the director requires. The application shall include the
information specified in section 12-225-105.
(2) Any changes in the information required by subsection (1) of this section shall be
reported within thirty days after the change to the division in the form and manner required by
the director.
(3) Every applicant for registration shall pay a registration fee to be established by the
director in the manner authorized by section 12-20-105. Registrations issued pursuant to this
article 225 are subject to the renewal, expiration, reinstatement, and delinquency fee provisions
specified in section 12-20-202 (1) and (2). Any person whose registration has expired shall be
subject to the penalties provided in this article 225 or section 12-20-202 (1).
(4) To qualify to register, a direct-entry midwife must have successfully completed an
examination evaluated and approved by the director as an appropriate test to measure
competency in the practice of direct-entry midwifery, which examination must have been
developed by a person or entity other than the director or the division and the acquisition of
which shall require no expenditure of state funds. The national registry examination
administered by the Midwives Alliance of North America, or its successor, must be among those
evaluated by the director. The director is authorized to approve any existing test meeting all the
criteria set forth in this subsection (4). In addition to successfully completing the examination, a
direct-entry midwife is qualified to register if the person has:
(a) Attained the age of nineteen years;
(b) Earned at least a high school diploma or the equivalent;
(c) Successfully completed training approved by the director in:
(I) The provision of care during labor and delivery and during the antepartum and
postpartum periods;
(II) Parenting education for prepared childbirth;
(III) Aseptic techniques and universal precautions;
(IV) Management of birth and immediate care of the mother and the newborn;
(V) Recognition of early signs of possible abnormalities;
(VI) Recognition and management of emergency situations;
(VII) Special requirements for home birth;
(VIII) Recognition of communicable diseases affecting the pregnancy, birth, newborn,
and postpartum periods; and
(IX) Recognition of the signs and symptoms of increased risk of medical, obstetric, or
neonatal complications or problems as set forth in section 12-225-106 (3);
(d) Acquired practical experience including, at a minimum, experience with the conduct
of at least one hundred prenatal examinations on no fewer than thirty different women and
observation of at least thirty births;
(e) Participated as a birth attendant, including rendering care from the prenatal period
through the postpartum period, in connection with at least thirty births; and
(f) Filed documentation with the director that the direct-entry midwife is currently
certified by the American Heart Association or the American Red Cross to perform adult and
infant cardiopulmonary resuscitation ("CPR").
(5) Effective July 1, 2003, in order to be deemed qualified to register, a direct-entry
midwife must have graduated from an accredited midwifery educational program or obtained a
substantially equivalent education approved by the director. The educational requirement does
not apply to direct-entry midwives who have registered with the division before July 1, 2003.
(6) For purposes of registration under this article 225, no credential, licensure, or
certification issued by any other state meets the requirements of this article 225, and therefore
there is no reciprocity with other states.

‹ Prev All Colorado sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.