Black Health logo Black Health

Is this you? Claim this listing to customize your profile, add photos, and receive patient inquiries.

Claim this listing
EC

Erica Collie

MomE 2 Mommy

Accepting new patients In-person visits

Specialties

About Erica Collie

Erica Collie is a Black birth doula listed in the Black Health provider directory. Erica sees patients at MomE 2 Mommy. Erica offers in-person visits and is currently accepting new patients.

This profile is unclaimed. Erica Collie can claim this listing to add a personal bio, photo, and additional details.

Black patients and Birth Doula

Black birth doulas: continuous labor support. Continuous labor support is associated with 39 percent lower C-section rates, critical for Black birthing people.

A Cochrane review of continuous labor support found a 39 percent lower C-section rate, fewer instrumental deliveries, shorter labors, and better satisfaction with birth experience. For Black birthing people, who face 3 times higher maternal mortality (CDC) and 36 percent national C-section rates, a doula functions as both emotional advocate and clinical translator during labor. Medicaid is now covering doula care in a growing number of states, including CA, NY, NJ, VA, MD, and others.

What birth doulas provide

  • Prenatal meetings to build birth preferences
  • Continuous support in labor: emotional, physical, informational
  • Partner coaching
  • Advocacy during interventions and decisions
  • Immediate postpartum support
  • One follow-up visit typically

Advocacy prompts

  • What's your experience with the hospital I'm planning to birth at?
  • Do you accept Medicaid or a sliding scale?
  • What does your backup plan look like if you're unavailable?

Frequently asked questions

Is Erica Collie accepting new patients?

Yes, Erica Collie is accepting new patients.

Does Erica Collie offer telehealth?

Erica Collie sees patients in person at their listed office.

What does a Birth Doula treat?

Black birth doulas: continuous labor support. Continuous labor support is associated with 39 percent lower C-section rates, critical for Black birthing people.

Find more Black providers