Areas Served
Providing midwifery care for a 1 hour radius from Connie's home in Monona, Wisconsin.
Including: Madison, Monona, Cottage Grove, Deerfield, McFarland, Stoughton, Cambridge, Sun Prairie, Lake Mills, Watertown, DeForest, Waukanee, Johnson Creek, Oconomowoc, Baraboo, Wisconsin Dells, Middleton, Sauk City, Mount Horeb, New Glarus, Verona, Oregon, Fitchburg, Columbus, Beaver Dam, Waterloo, Portage, Janesville, Evansville, Edgerton, and beyond.
Insurance & Payment
I accept and am in network with Badgercare, Aetna, Cigna, The Alliance, Chorus Community Health Plans, Self Fund Health, Trilogy, WPS, Sana, cash, check, credit cards, HSA/FSA, and payment from Health Share Ministries and Cost-sharing organizations.
If you are covered by an insurance that I am not in network with, I will be considered an out of network provider.
I work with Sarah Lyons with Billing for Littles for verification of benefits, preparing and submitting claims to private insurance companies as an out of network provider.
Please reach out to your insurance company to communicate your desire for insurance coverage for out of hospital midwifery care. We can also attempt to do a Prior Authorization with your insurance company.
If the cost of home birth midwifery care is hindering, please reach out to me! Accessibility to midwifery care is extremely important to me. All offerings are eligible for payment plans if requested, and are due in full by 36 weeks gestation unless previously agreed upon.
Occasionally I will also accept partial barters for goods and services. Current barter interests include (but aren’t limited to) home repair related services, auto mechanics, bodywork, art, CSA or meals, etc.
Safety of Home Birth
Home Birth is a choice available to low risk individuals and their low risk babies. Most countries have out of hospital birth as the norm of care for low risk people.
In a recent report from the Cochrane review, evidence showed that planned home birth with a midwife was as safe for low risk individuals for as a hospital birth, and had significantly less interventions than hospital births.