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Baystate Franklin Medical Center’s Birthplace and Pioneer Women's Health Receives Grant to Expand EMPOWER Program

February 10, 2019

20190125  BFMC EMPOWER Grant Group 4986 sm

 

The EMPOWER program at Baystate Franklin Medical Center, designed to help pregnant women with opioid use disorder (OUD) have healthy babies and pursue healthier futures, is poised to expand after receiving a two-year, $1 million federal grant.

 

Baystate Franklin Medical Center partnered with the Center for Human Development (CHD) to pursue the grant. Through federal State Targeted Response (SOR) funding, a portion of which is dedicated to expand the state’s “Moms Do Care” (MDC) program, the Department of Public Health Bureau of Substance Addiction Services has awarded Baystate Franklin Medical Center the only Western Massachusetts Moms Do Care franchise of the five it is currently funding.

 

The EMPOWER program currently serves approximately 30 women and families in Franklin County each year. It is a community-based program, created by the Franklin County Perinatal Support Coalition, to provide support and resources for women with OUD which promote healthy pregnancy and birth, provide parenting support and encourage long-term recovery.

 

The grant will allow Baystate Franklin Medical Center to partner with CHD to form a medical/behavioral health home which will provide expanded support to pregnant, postpartum and parenting women, ages 18 or older (who may also have a child/children 36 months or younger) with OUD and/or a history of opioid overdose. 

 

“Since 2015, EMPOWER has successfully focused on supporting families during pregnancy and birth, but we have always wanted to extend our support to include the postpartum period, when research shows mothers can be vulnerable to depression and relapse.” said Linda Jablonski, assistant nurse manager at Baystate Franklin Medical Center.

 

Jablonski will lead the initiative along with CHD’s vice president of behavioral health services, Katherine M. Cook. CHD will spearhead the behavioral health component of the expanded program.  “Our agency will complement the work of MDC EMPOWER by providing the counseling and support services that are absolutely essential to long-term recovery, successful parenting and self-care.”

 

MDC programs emphasize the importance of peer to peer support; partnering women with other women who have lived experience, who are in recovery, and have been specially trained to work with women with OUD.  Women enrolled in other MDC programs in MA report positive outcomes such as abstinence from substance use, reduction in opioid overdose, reduction in trauma and increases in recovery supports. MDC EMPOWER in Franklin County will offer peer support through recovery coaches and Doulas, trained professionals who provide physical, emotional and informational support to women before, during and after childbirth.

 

“Pregnancy can be an ideal time for women to get the help they need with OUD; however, they face obstacles such as stigma, guilt and fear as they try to access services.  Despite being the most rural county in the state, Franklin County has excellent resources and a strong commitment to serving this vulnerable population.  The additional services we’ll be able to provide with Moms Do Care funding will not only help the women and families we serve, but will have a positive impact our community as well.” said Jablonski.

 

According to the 2015 Health Policy Commission report, the Birthplace at Baystate Franklin Medical Center had the second highest neonatal abstinence rate in western Massachusetts and the eighth highest in the state.

The Moms Do Care EMPOWER program is scheduled to launch in early 2019.