At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community who are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality healthcare to underserved and rural populations.
Frontier graduate Marianna Holland, DNP, CNM, filled a crucial gap in healthcare in her community when she opened her own birth center, New Phase at the Birth Nest in Glendale, Arizona. New Phase, which was opened after Dr. Holland graduated from FNU with a Master of Science degree in nurse-midwifery and a Doctor of Nursing Practice, is the only BIPOC-led birth center in the state.
New Phase offers prenatal care, labor and delivery, newborn and postpartum care, and well woman care. At the birth center, Dr. Holland is supported by a dedicated team of midwives and staff members. In fact, Dr. Holland is not the only FNU graduate on staff, with Bethany Mainville-Brooks, DNP, FNP, CNM, also serving as a nurse-midwife at the birth center and hospital.
In addition to being the only birth center in Arizona owned and operated by midwives of color, New Phase is the only community practice in the Glendale area that maintains hospital privileges for safe community transfers when necessary. The birth center also hosts special events, such as postpartum classes, mom meet-ups and more.
As a Frontier graduate, Dr. Holland recognizes the unique challenges and disparities that BIPOC individuals and underserved communities face in accessing quality healthcare, particularly maternal and reproductive healthcare.
“My goal is to help my community find midwifery and other resources to further support health promotion,” she said. This is also one of the reasons she started precepting.
Dr. Holland is a preceptor to several midwifery programs and has worked with six FNU students so far. The birth center strives to support future midwives by providing opportunities to strengthen their skill sets and build confidence.
Dr. Holland is not only a preceptor, but also a faculty member at the University of Arizona with a focus on midwifery education.
“I want to teach, along with precepting, to be able to encourage more midwives of color,” Dr. Holland said.
Before graduating from Frontier, Dr. Holland served for nearly a decade as an acute care labor and delivery nurse. She said while in nursing school, she was taught by an FNU graduate, an experience that inspired her to study at FNU. She said she was also motivated by the distance learning model offered by FNU, which enabled her to balance her education with her family responsibilities.
Earlier this year, Dr. Holland was inducted as an American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM) fellow, joining 47 fellow inductees who have led exemplary careers in midwifery. Fellowship in the American College of Nurse-Midwives is given to midwives whose demonstrated leadership within ACNM, clinical excellence, outstanding scholarship, and professional achievement have merited special recognition both within and outside of the midwifery profession. Dr. Holland said she attended her first ACNM conference as a student ambassador with FNU.
Outside of her work, Dr. Holland, a married mother of two, enjoys cooking, baking, and reading.
Thank you, Marianna, for advancing women’s healthcare in your community, for helping to train the next generation of nurse-midwives and for exemplifying the excellence of Frontier graduates.
To read more alumni stories, visit the FNU Alumni stories page. For more on precepting, visit Become a Preceptor.
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