Ronnie Lichtman

Last updated
Ronnie Lichtman
Ronnie Lichtman.jpg
Born
Ronnie Sue Lichtman

(1950-02-10) February 10, 1950 (age 74)
Alma mater Columbia University School of Nursing (MS)
Columbia University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (PhD)
Relatives Allan Lichtman (brother)

Ronnie Sue Lichtman (born February 10, 1950) is a midwife, [1] [2] educator, writer and advocate for women's health. She has published widely for both lay and professional audiences. [3] The Chair of the Midwifery Education Program at The State University of New York (SUNY) Downstate Medical Center [4] in New York City, she earned a Ph.D. in sociomedical sciences from Columbia University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and her MS in Maternity Nursing with a specialization in midwifery from Columbia University School of Nursing. She previously directed the midwifery programs at Columbia University [5] and Stony Brook University. [3] [6] [7]

Contents

Early life

Ronnie Lichtman was born in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Her late father, Emanuel Lichtman, was an optometrist and her late mother, Gertrude Lichtman, was a bookkeeper. [8] Her parents moved Lichtman and her two brothers, Allan and Steven, to the Bronx when she was 14 years old where Lichtman attended Christopher Columbus High School. [8]

After graduating as valedictorian from Christopher Columbus High School, Lichtman attended Brandeis University for a year, leaving to join an anti-war group in New York City called The Resistance. [8] This was in the late 1960s during the height of the Vietnam War.

Anti-war issues led Lichtman to become involved with the Women's Liberation Movement. She started a "small consciousness-raising group" of women who worked with The Resistance. Lichtman co-founded a woman's magazine titled Up from Under. She both wrote and edited articles for Up from Under [8] Her article on the small group in women's liberation was widely reproduced and appeared in Gerda Lerner's anthology, The Female Experience: An American Documentary. [9]

Lichtman would go on to become a childbirth educator and earn a registered nursing degree from Bronx Community College in 1974 and eventually her master's and doctoral degrees from Columbia University. [8]

Education

Career

Ronnie Lichtman began her professional midwifery career at North Central Bronx Hospital working both in the clinic and the labor and delivery unit, caring for low-income, immigrant, and under-served women. She eventually opened a private midwifery practice [10] that focused on well-woman gynecologic care. Lichtman, while working as a midwifery educator. She left North Central Bronx to become a midwifery faculty member at Columbia University School of Nursing where she later became Program Director. Lichtman wanted to be exposed to distance education in midwifery so she left Columbia to become Education Director of the midwifery education program at Stony Brook University. She was appointed Program Director at Stony Brook University before moving to her current position as Professor and Program Chair of the Midwifery Education Program at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in 2002. [1] [8]

Lichtman has authored and edited books, book chapters, and journal and magazine articles. [11] She was inducted into the American College of Nurse Midwives’ Fellowship (FACNM) in 2004. [11]

Lichtman has suggested a new word for what midwives do at birth. Rejecting both the traditional idea of "delivering" babies (mothers deliver, not midwives) and the more whimsical "catching" babies that some midwives use (as an educator, she feels this diminishes the valuable hand skills that midwives use at birth), she has suggested the simple word "guide." She noted that this demeans neither the birthing woman nor the midwife and relates to both the midwife's role in helping women through labor and guiding the baby through the birth canal. [12]

Books

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Midwifery</span> Pregnancy and childbirth-related profession

Midwifery is the health science and health profession that deals with pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period, in addition to the sexual and reproductive health of women throughout their lives. In many countries, midwifery is a medical profession. A professional in midwifery is known as a midwife.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Certified nurse-midwife</span> Advanced practice nurse who provides mid-level nursing and midwifery care

In the United States, a Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM) is a nurse midwife who exceeds the International Confederation of Midwives' essential competencies for a midwife and is also an advanced practice registered nurse, having completed registered nursing and midwifery education leading to practice as a nurse midwife and credentialing as a Certified Nurse-Midwife. CNMs provide care of women across their lifespan, including pregnancy and the postpartum period, and well woman care and birth control. Certified Nurse-Midwives are recognized by the International Confederation of Midwives as a type of midwife in the U.S.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frontier Nursing Service</span> American rural healthcare service

The Frontier Nursing Service (FNS) provides healthcare services to rural, underserved populations since 1925, and educates nurse-midwives since 1939.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Carson Breckinridge</span> Founder of the American FNS (1881–1965)

Mary Carson Breckinridge was an American nurse midwife and the founder of the Frontier Nursing Service (FNS), which provided comprehensive family medical care to the mountain people of rural Kentucky. FNS served remote and impoverished areas off the road and rail system but accessible by horseback. She modeled her services on European practices and sought to professionalize American nurse-midwives to practice autonomously in homes and decentralized clinics. Although Breckinridge's work demonstrated efficacy by dramatically reducing infant and maternal mortality in Appalachia, at a comparatively low cost, her model of nurse-midwifery never took root in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bonnie Urquhart Gruenberg</span>

Bonnie Urquhart Gruenberg is an American photographer, author, artist, and certified nurse-midwife. She was raised in Connecticut and earned degrees in nursing at Southern Vermont College and the University of Pennsylvania. She worked as an urban emergency medical technician/paramedic in Connecticut from 1988 to 2000. Her published works cluster within two primary topics: wild horses and midwifery/childbearing. She is the author of Birth Emergency Skills Training and the creator of its associated workshops. She is also the creator of the Atlantic Wild Horse Trail, a virtual route that links the feral horse herds of the Atlantic coast into a chain of vacation spots and day-trip destinations.

Ruth Watson Lubic, CNM, EdD, FAAN, FACNM, is an American nurse-midwife and applied anthropologist who pioneered the role of nurse-midwives as primary care providers for women, particularly in maternity care. Lubic is considered to be one of the leaders of the nurse-midwifery movement in the United States.

In the United States, certified nurse midwives (CNMs) are advanced practice registered nurses in nurse midwifery, the nursing care of women during pregnancy and the postpartum period. CNMs are considered as midwives.

Midwives in the United States assist childbearing women during pregnancy, labor and birth, and the postpartum period. Some midwives also provide primary care for women including well-woman exams, health promotion, and disease prevention, family planning options, and care for common gynecological concerns. Before the turn of the 20th century, traditional midwives were informally trained and helped deliver almost all births. Today, midwives are professionals who must undergo formal training. Midwives in the United States formed the Midwifery Education, Regulation, and Association task force to establish a framework for midwifery.

Mary Francis Hill Coley was an American lay midwife who ran a successful business providing a range of birth services and who starred in a critically acclaimed documentary film used to train midwives and doctors. Her competence projected an image of black midwives as the face of an internationally esteemed medical profession, while working within the context of deep social and economic inequality in health care provided to African Americans. Her life story and work exist in the context of Southern granny midwives who served birthing women outside of hospitals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Direct-entry midwife</span>

A direct-entry midwife is a midwife who has become credentialed without first becoming a nurse. There are direct-entry midwifery programs that prepare students to become Certified Nurse Midwives (CNMs) or Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs). Certified Professional Midwives are known for being "more natural and less intervention oriented." In other words, these midwives typically work outside of the hospital setting in homes and birth centers and do not employ methods for childbirth that physicians in hospitals commonly use such as caesarean section, forceps and other types of equipment and drugs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Midwife</span> Medical professional who practices obstetrics as a health science

A midwife is a health professional who cares for mothers and newborns around childbirth, a specialization known as midwifery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nurse midwife</span>

A nurse midwife is both a nurse and a midwife, having completed nursing and midwifery education leading to practice as a nurse midwife and sometimes credentialed in the specialty. Nurse midwives provide care of women across the lifespan, including during pregnancy and the postpartum period, and well woman care and birth control.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victoria Joyce Ely</span> American nurse (1889–1979)

Victoria Joyce Ely was an American nurse who served in World War I in the Army Nurse Corps and then provided nursing services in the Florida Panhandle in affiliation with the American Red Cross. To address the high infant and maternal death rates in Florida in the 1920s, she lectured and worked at the state health office. Due to her work, training improved for birth attendants and death rates dropped. After 15 years in the state's service, she opened a rural health clinic in Ruskin, Florida, providing both basic nursing services and midwife care. The facility was renamed the Joyce Ely Health Center in her honor in 1954. In 1983, she was inducted into Florida Public Health Association's Hall of Memory and in 2002 was inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame.

Eunice Katherine Macdonald "Kitty" Ernst was an American nurse midwife and leader in the nurse-midwife movement in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mamie Odessa Hale</span>

Mamie Odessa Hale was a leader in public health and a midwife consultant who worked in Arkansas for the Department of Health from 1945 to 1950. During this time, Hale's objective was to educate and train 'granny midwives.' Her efforts were in place to address the public health disparity between black and white women that was currently evident.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">American College of Nurse-Midwives</span>

The American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM) is a professional association in the United States, formed in 1955, that represents certified nurse-midwives (CNMs) and certified midwives (CMs). Dating back to 1929, ACNM strives to be a leading example for excellence in midwifery education and practice in the United States and has a special interest in promoting global health in developing countries. "Members are primary care providers for women throughout the lifespan, with a special emphasis on pregnancy, childbirth, and gynecologic and reproductive health. ACNM reviews research, administers and promotes continuing education programs, and works with organizations, state and federal agencies, and members of Congress to advance the well-being of women and infants through the practice of midwifery."

Elizabeth Sager Sharp CNM, DrPH, FAAN, FACNM, was an American nurse and midwife who specialized in maternal and newborn health. In 1999, she received the American College of Nurse-Midwives' Hattie Hemschemeyer Award.

Brooke A. Flinders is an American nurse midwife and academic administrator who is the incoming president of Frontier Nursing University.

Joan K. Slager is an American nurse midwife and academic administrator serving the dean of nursing at Frontier Nursing University since 2018.

Jessica Brumley is an American nurse midwife who is an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology and director of the division of midwifery at the University of South Florida College of Medicine.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "College of Health Related Professions - Midwifery Education Program". www.downstate.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  2. "RONNIE LICHTMAN NPI 1720027493 - Midwife". npiprofile.com. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  3. 1 2 "Ronnie Lichtman, CNM, Ph.D." ronnielichtman.com. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  4. "NYC Midwives - Becoming a Midwife". nycmidwives.soapboxcms.com. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  5. "Nurse Midwifery Program: Celebrating 60 Years". School of Nursing. 2015-04-07. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  6. The Stony Brook University, Health Sciences Center, School of Nursing, Stony Brook University Midwifery Program Faculty. "A Manual for Preceptors" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. "Experts | Being Pregnant | First 30 Days". www.first30days.com. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Richardson: A midwife's tale - Giving power to moms-to-be". NY Daily News. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  9. Lerner, Gerda (1977-01-01). The Female experience: an American documentary. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Educational Pub. ISBN   978-0-672-51555-2. OCLC   2745868.
  10. "Dr. Ronnie Sue Lichtman CNM, PhD, FACNM, New York". doctors.at. Retrieved 2015-10-13.
  11. 1 2 "College of Health Related Professions - Midwifery Education Program". www.downstate.edu. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  12. Lichtman, Ronnie (2013-04-01). "Midwives don't deliver or catch: a humble vocabulary suggestion". Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health. 58 (2): 124–125. doi:10.1111/j.1542-2011.2012.00253.x. ISSN   1542-2011. PMID   23437836.