Welcome to the Midwifery, Maternal and Reproductive Health Conference, taking place on November 27-28, 2025 - a global gathering where compassion meets innovation and every story begins with care. We're honored to bring together midwives, maternal health advocates, and reproductive health experts to share knowledge, celebrate progress, and spark transformative conversations. This conference is more than an event; it's a collaborative movement to uplift practices, foster meaningful partnerships, and improve outcomes for mothers, babies, and communities worldwide. Together, let's honor tradition, embrace innovation, and shape a healthier, more empowered future.
The Midwifery, Maternal, and Reproductive Health Conference, scheduled for November 27-28, 2025, is an international platform dedicated to advancing clinical practice, research, and policy in maternal and reproductive health. This global gathering will bring together midwives, obstetricians, gynecologists, nurses, researchers, educators, and policymakers to foster interdisciplinary collaboration and knowledge exchange. With a strong emphasis on evidence-based care and holistic approaches, the conference will explore vital themes such as maternal health outcomes, midwifery-led care models, prenatal and postnatal care, reproductive rights, family planning, and equitable access to maternal services. Attendees will engage in a comprehensive program featuring keynote presentations, scientific sessions, expert panels, and interactive workshops designed to inspire dialogue, innovation, and practice improvement. The event aims to strengthen international networks, support academic excellence, and promote inclusive, respectful, and culturally competent maternal and reproductive healthcare solutions for individuals and communities worldwide.
This topic explores the integrated disciplines of gynecology, reproductive health, and midwifery with a strong focus on maternal well-being. It emphasizes the biological, psychological, and social aspects of women's health throughout the reproductive lifespan-from adolescence to menopause. The theme supports awareness, prevention, and management of reproductive issues and enhances the role of midwives in ensuring safe maternal and newborn outcomes. Special attention is given to global health challenges, innovations in maternal care, and rights-based reproductive services.
This subject focuses on the anatomical and physiological aspects of the female reproductive system, pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum processes. It provides midwives and healthcare professionals with essential knowledge of the human body, emphasizing the changes and functions that occur during conception, pregnancy, labor, and puerperium. Understanding these concepts is vital for delivering competent and safe maternal care.
Postnatal (or postpartum) care involves monitoring and supporting the mother and newborn for up to 6 weeks after delivery. This period is crucial for physical recovery, mental well-being, and bonding between the mother and baby. Intrapartum care goal is to ensure the safety and well-being of both mother and baby by managing physiological processes and identifying complications early.
Family planning and contraception are essential components of midwifery, maternal, and reproductive health. Family planning contributes to the reduction of maternal and infant mortality, improves women's health, and promotes gender equality. Midwives play a critical role in counseling, education, and provision of contraceptive services in a safe, ethical, and culturally sensitive manner.
Breastfeeding and infant nutrition are foundational elements in maternal and child health. In the context of midwifery and reproductive health, optimal feeding practices ensure the well-being of both mother and child, while influencing lifelong health outcomes. Midwives play a critical role in supporting, educating, and guiding mothers through the early stages of infant feeding. This topic encompasses physiological, social, cultural, and policy-driven aspects that affect feeding practices worldwide.
Neonatology is a specialized branch of pediatrics that focuses on the medical care of newborn infants, particularly those who are ill or born prematurely. In midwifery, understanding neonatology and newborn assessment is critical for ensuring early identification of complications, promoting maternal-infant bonding, and supporting the infant's healthy development. This topic integrates clinical observation, physiological assessment, and evidence-based interventions to provide comprehensive care in the immediate postnatal period.
Newborn assessment in midwifery includes both routine and advanced evaluation of a baby's health, ensuring a smooth transition from intrauterine to extrauterine life. Midwives play a crucial role in recognizing early warning signs, supporting breastfeeding, and educating parents during this sensitive period.
Obstetric emergencies and complications are critical events that can occur during pregnancy, labor, and the postpartum period, posing significant risks to both maternal and fetal health. Timely identification and appropriate management of these emergencies are essential components of maternal and reproductive healthcare. Midwives, as frontline healthcare providers, play a crucial role in early detection, stabilization, and referral, ensuring the safety and well-being of mothers and their newborns. This topic explores various obstetric emergencies, their causes, clinical presentations, management strategies, and the vital role of midwifery in addressing such challenges.
Community Health and Midwifery focuses on delivering essential maternal and reproductive health services at the community level. It aims to promote health, prevent disease, reduce maternal and neonatal mortality, and ensure access to skilled birth attendance and postpartum care. Midwives in community settings play a critical role in health education, early detection of complications, family planning, and referrals, especially in rural and underserved populations.
Trauma-informed midwifery is a care approach that recognizes the widespread impact of trauma on individuals and seeks to create a safe, respectful, and empowering environment for childbearing people. In maternal and reproductive health, this model acknowledges past traumatic experiences-such as sexual abuse, birth trauma, violence, or systemic discrimination-and integrates that understanding into clinical practice. It emphasizes emotional safety, informed consent, trust-building, and patient autonomy. This approach is crucial in addressing disparities, reducing retraumatization, and improving health outcomes for birthing individuals across diverse backgrounds.
The psychosocial aspects of maternity care encompass the emotional, social, cultural, and psychological factors influencing a woman's experience during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period. Midwives and maternal health providers play a critical role in recognizing and addressing these aspects to ensure holistic care. This approach promotes maternal well-being, fosters positive birth experiences, and improves outcomes for both the mother and baby. By acknowledging the impact of mental health, social support, cultural beliefs, and gender dynamics, maternity care becomes more responsive and patient-centered.
Nutrition plays a critical role in ensuring the health and wellbeing of both the mother and the baby during pregnancy and lactation. Adequate intake of essential nutrients supports fetal growth and development, maintains maternal health, and facilitates successful lactation. Midwives and healthcare providers must understand the unique dietary requirements during these periods to offer proper guidance and support. Malnutrition or inadequate nutrition can lead to complications such as low birth weight, preterm labor, and developmental delays in infants.
Some infections may be asymptomatic but still pose serious risks, such as miscarriage, preterm labor, fetal anomalies, or neonatal complications. Midwives and maternal health professionals play a critical role in early identification, prevention, and management of infections in pregnancy.
Menstrual disorders encompass a range of conditions affecting the regularity, frequency, and characteristics of menstruation. In midwifery, maternal, and reproductive health, understanding these disorders is vital for early diagnosis, effective management, and improved quality of life for women across reproductive age. These conditions may indicate underlying hormonal, anatomical, or systemic issues that require careful evaluation and interdisciplinary management. Midwives and healthcare providers play a critical role in counseling, diagnosing, and managing menstrual problems while promoting menstrual hygiene and reproductive rights.
Midwifery care for high-risk pregnancies plays a vital role in ensuring safe maternal and neonatal outcomes. High-risk pregnancies involve complications that pose a threat to the health of the mother, fetus, or both. These may be due to pre-existing medical conditions, obstetric complications, or socio-environmental factors. Midwives, trained in identifying risk factors and collaborating with obstetric teams, offer comprehensive, respectful, and individualized care to manage such pregnancies effectively. Their role includes early detection, continuous monitoring, timely referrals, emotional support, and health education to promote positive outcomes in complex pregnancies.
Counseling in midwifery is an essential component of maternal and reproductive healthcare. It involves offering emotional support, accurate information, and guidance to women and families throughout the reproductive lifecycle. Midwives play a crucial role in promoting informed decision-making, reducing anxiety, and enhancing the overall well-being of mothers and newborns. Effective counseling fosters trust, empowers women, and contributes to safer pregnancy outcomes.
Palliative and bereavement care in midwifery focuses on supporting women and families who experience life-limiting fetal conditions, stillbirths, neonatal loss, or maternal health complications. It is a compassionate, holistic approach that prioritizes emotional, psychological, spiritual, and physical comfort. Midwives play a critical role in offering support during the perinatal period, ensuring dignity, respect, and individualized care for grieving families.
This session explores the multifaceted impact of this legal shift on midwifery practices, maternal healthcare delivery, and reproductive rights. From legal restrictions to ethical dilemmas, and from patient access to provider responsibilities, this topic aims to critically examine how the post-Roe environment challenges and reshapes the roles of healthcare professionals, especially midwives, in supporting pregnant people through reproductive choices and maternal care. The session also highlights global perspectives, comparing how other countries adapt and respond to restrictive or supportive reproductive health frameworks.
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The global midwifery, maternal, and reproductive health market is experiencing steady growth, currently valued around $60-70 billion with a projected CAGR of 6-8% through 2030. This growth is driven by increasing awareness of maternal rights, government initiatives, and a shift toward personalized, woman-centered care. Regions like Asia-Pacific and Africa are showing rapid demand due to high birth rates and evolving healthcare infrastructure, while developed countries focus on digital health innovations such as telemidwifery, AI-driven pregnancy monitoring, and reproductive health apps. Despite challenges like limited access to trained midwives and policy barriers, the future outlook remains strong with the market expected to surpass $120 billion by 2030, propelled by investments in digital solutions, sustainable reproductive products, and decentralized care models that emphasize affordability, accessibility, and culturally sensitive maternal support.