The Combest Center is now offering prenatal services through a primary model called
CenteringPregnancy.
CenteringPregnancy is a unique, evidence-based enhanced maternity care service. The
model is designed to integrate health assessment, education and support into a unified
program within a group setting. Eight to 10 women with similar gestational ages meet
to learn how their body changes during pregnancy, mother and infant care skills, participate
in facilitated discussions and develop a support network at each prenatal visit.
“The centering approach is designed to enhance prenatal and maternity care delivery
and address the medical, behavioral and psychosocial factors that may occur during
pregnancy and possibly contribute to preterm-related poor birth outcomes,” said Yondell
Masten, Ph.D., WHNP-BC, RNC-OB, The Florence Thelma Hall Endowed Chair for Nursing
Excellence in Women’s Health, professor, associate dean of outcomes management and
evaluation, and women’s health nurse practitioner in the School of Nursing.
Each group meets for 10 sessions throughout pregnancy and early postpartum. A health
provider, one of two group facilitators, completes standard physical health assessments
during each prenatal group visit.
Additionally, expectant mothers have the opportunity to enroll in the Strong Start
for Mothers and Infants program. Strong Start mothers receive enhanced prenatal care
through the Maternity Care Home model using care coordination, birth plan development
and assistance with Texas Women, Infants and Children (WIC) enrollment provided by
community health workers through the Texas Tech Physicians OB-GYN Clinic or CenteringPregnancy
at the Combest Center.
Mothers in the CenteringPregnancy program receive enhanced prenatal care provided
by a registered nurse and an advanced practice registered nurse (APRN). The APRNs
are women’s health nurse practitioners or certified nurse-midwives.
TTUHSC was one of 27 institutions in the U.S. to receive a four-year $896,867 grant
from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services last year to establish the Strong
Start for Mothers and Infants program and includes both the CenteringPregnancy and
Maternity Care Home models.
Strong Start is a collaborative interprofessional intervention provided to approximately
500 to 700 participants a year by the Combest Center and the Texas Tech Physicians
Family Medicine and OB-GYN departments.