Picture this: instead of rushing through a prenatal appointment alone, you join a circle of eight or so expectant parents due around the same time. Over 90 relaxed minutes, you learn about stress management and breastfeeding, get individual check-ins from your provider, and build real relationships with other parents-to-be who actually get what you’re going through.

This is the heart of CenteringPregnancy, and if new legislation moves forward, moms across Michigan could soon have better access to this kind of support. 

On July 1, the Michigan Senate passed Senate Bills 414 and 415, which would require both private insurers and Medicaid to cover these group-based prenatal care programs.

Related: New CDC data shows that more pregnant women are unable to access prenatal care

Why it matters: the science of community prenatal care

The idea is simple: you get your prenatal care in a group setting, alongside other pregnant people. But the impact goes way beyond the check-up. CenteringPregnancy helps normalize the experience of motherhood, offering emotional support and measurable health benefits.

Studies have shown major benefits:

  • A 33–47% drop in preterm births in randomized trials, with even stronger effects for Black mothers—a meaningful step toward addressing racial disparities in birth outcomes.
  • A 40% reduction in postpartum depression symptoms at six months, according to a meta-analysis

For families already facing barriers to care, these improvements are life-changing.

More than medical care: building a village

Beyond the metrics, the emotional benefit of group prenatal care is hard to overstate. CenteringPregnancy creates space for parents to share fears, questions, and excitement with people on the same journey. It turns what can feel like a medical transaction into a shared rite of passage.

For many moms, it means leaving appointments feeling empowered, informed, and less alone. It can also help detect mental health challenges earlier, improve breastfeeding success, and reduce feelings of isolation that so often accompany pregnancy and postpartum life.

What the Michigan bills would change 

The two bills passed by the Senate aim to make this model a standard part of care—not just a nice-to-have pilot.

  • Senate Bill 414 would require private insurers who already cover prenatal care to include group prenatal care in their plans.
  • Senate Bill 415 would permanently secure Medicaid coverage for CenteringPregnancy in Michigan. (Medicaid already reimburses for it—but this law would ensure it stays that way.)

By putting these requirements into law, the state would ensure consistent, widespread access, even if budgets or administrations change.

Related: New York is officially the first state to mandate PTO for prenatal care

A model the rest of the country should be watching 

Supporters of the legislation see Michigan as a potential national example. They argue that expanding CenteringPregnancy access is one of the simplest ways to improve maternal and infant health while also saving money on avoidable NICU stays and complications.

For families, it represents a shift away from fragmented, rushed care toward a model that’s relational, supportive, and proven to work.

As a mom of five kids who was underwhelmed with the traditional prenatal care model, I’m excited about a healthcare system that doesn’t just provide clinical insights, but also human connection. What’s more intimate, life-transforming, and support-group worthy than bringing a new baby into the world?

Sources:

  1. CenteringPregnancy: A model of group prenatal care. 2023. Centering Healthcare Institute. CenteringPregnancy: A model of group prenatal care.
  2. Group prenatal care reduces risk of preterm birth. October 2016. YaleNews. Group prenatal care reduces risk of preterm birth.
  3. Group prenatal care: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. November 2019. Obstetrics & Gynecology. Group prenatal care: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
  4. SB 414 and SB 415. July 2024. Michigan Legislature. SB 414 and SB 415.