If you feel called to doula work, you are probably not looking for inspiration alone. You want to know what to do in the room, what to say when decisions get intense, how to support a mother with steady confidence, and how to remain helpful whether birth is physiologic, medicated, induced, or surgical. You may also be looking for a training that is Christian in framework and still respects the wide variety of families and birth choices you will serve.
Many doula trainings are built around book reports and a short workshop followed by finding multiple births on your own before you can finish. For some students, that can mean months of waiting to complete certification and stepping into doula work winging it with very little structured training.
The Community-based Perinatal Support and Childbirth Education Course provides 78.5 hours of structured training over 10 weeks that includes practical field projects designed to build real-world readiness and help you set up a functioning Community Perinatal Doula practice. Yes, you will be all done in 10 weeks! Plan to devote 8 hours a week to study. And don’t worry, you will not have to do any book reports.
Unlike other trainings that only cover birth doula work or postpartum doula work or childbirth education work, this course prepares you to support families across the whole perinatal season – pregnancy, birth, and postpartum – saving you time, money, and the agonizing process of having to pick only one! Not only that, but you will learn how to teach as well as how to support. Learn more about what it means to be a Community Perinatal Doula below.
She supports families through education, emotional support, hands-on comfort measures, communication support, and practical planning, while staying clearly in scope and using a referral-minded posture when concerns exceed the doula role.
Perinatal means the full season surrounding birth: active pregnancy support, birth support, and postpartum support. This includes early parenting education and basic lactation education.
Community means helping families navigate the real-life factors that affect health, continuity of care, and follow-through, including barriers such as transportation, childcare, language gaps, limited support, and system complexity.
In summary, A Community Perinatal Doula is a trained, non-clinical support professional who serves families across the whole perinatal season with steady competence, practical education, and strong community navigation.
Confidence supporting pregnancy, birth, and postpartum in one cohesive role
Practical labor support skills you can repeat under pressure
A community navigation mindset that helps families overcome real barriers
Postpartum recovery support and basic lactation education with referral clarity
A simple professional workflow and a launch-ready practice foundation
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By the end of this course, you will be able to:
Serve confidently across the whole perinatal season: provide active pregnancy support, steady birth support, postpartum support, and basic lactation education in a clear, non-clinical role.
Support families through real-life barriers: recognize common barriers to care (system complexity, transportation, childcare, language gaps, limited support, and health literacy challenges) and respond with practical, dignity-centered support.
Navigate resources and strengthen continuity of care: help clients identify and access community supports (WIC, lactation support, home visiting, mental health supports, social services, and local programs), and encourage timely follow-up with OB/midwife and pediatric care.
Make health information make sense: explain common perinatal terms, procedures, and choices in plain language so families can participate meaningfully in their care and feel confident asking questions.
Support client rights and respectful care: help clients prepare for appointments, speak up for their needs, request interpretation when needed, and communicate respectfully with the medical team while staying clearly within doula scope.
Build rapport and provide calm emotional support: show up with confidence, compassion, and a steady presence that helps families feel safe, heard, and supported.
Support informed choice without pushing an agenda: guide families through decision-making conversations using simple tools and respectful communication that reinforces informed consent and shared decision-making.
Provide practical labor support skills: offer hands-on comfort measures, positioning for labor progress, and coping support that helps the birthing woman cooperate with the labor process in real time.
Stay steady through a wide range of birth experiences: support physiologic births as well as epidurals, inductions, and cesarean births with calm presence, role clarity, and family-centered support.
Support postpartum recovery and the early transition home: teach recovery-centered support priorities, protect rest, and help families plan for practical help and healthy rhythms.
Teach early parenting basics: support newborn care confidence through education on infant cues, soothing, sleep rhythms, diapering, bathing, and safe sleep practices.
Provide basic lactation education with referral clarity: educate on breastfeeding basics, pumping and bottle-feeding considerations, and combination feeding with a clear referral posture when needs exceed scope.
Recognize concerns and escalate appropriately within scope: identify when concerns require timely contact with a licensed provider, IBCLC, mental health supports, or urgent/emergency care, and understand mandated reporting responsibilities.
Build a simple, professional doula workflow: set up practical systems for intake, scheduling, communication, confidentiality-minded documentation habits, and client outreach so your practice can function.
Build a launch-ready doula practice: create a practical “business plan snapshot” and publish a simple public website that clearly explains who you serve, what you offer, and how families can contact you, plus a referral-ready flyer or digital card you can share with community partners.
There are two delivery options. Choose the format that fits your life.
Option 1: Live Online (Zoom Cohort) - Join us live on Zoom for 10 Sundays from 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM ET, with breaks throughout. This option is ideal if you learn best with real-time teaching, discussion, and guided accountability.
Option 2: Online Course Hub (Asynchronous) - Complete the course through our online course hub with pre-recorded lectures and structured weekly assignments. You can work on your own schedule, but there are weekly deadlines to keep you moving steadily through the 10-week course window.
Through video/live multi-media lectures, textbook reading, handouts, class discussions, and instructor availability
Through scenarios and role-play discussions and practical field projects that actually translate into real practice
Through multiple choices quizzes and instructor feedback on field projects
Field projects give you opportunities to demonstrate the skills you have learned and prepare for your real doula practice, so you can hit the ground running once you are done. Field projects are built into the 10-week course, so there is no question about when you are finished. You will not be left wondering when you will finally “complete” your training. Field projects include creating a childbirth preparation lesson, demonstrating how to properly hold a bottle to support breastfeeding, creating a community resource guide, and more!
This course fulfills the main training requirement for certification under Born Again Academy. If you decide to pursue certification, you can review the additional certification requirements on the Certification page.
Many students appreciate that this course is like getting a birth doula training, postpartum training, childbirth education training, community health training, and lactation education training all in one, taught as one cohesive affordable skill set instead of separate expensive programs.
Tuition includes all course instruction and digital materials provided through the course (video lectures, handouts, worksheets, quizzes, and field project instructions). Students will also need:
Reliable internet access
Printing access (helpful for worksheets and handouts)
A baby bottle (DollarTree)
A swaddling blanket (DollarTree)
A 17+ inch baby doll or stuffed animal (for practice demonstrations)
Textbook: Your Pregnancy and Childbirth Month to Month, 7th Edition (ACOG)
Enroll in the next 10-week cohort and begin your training to serve families with confidence, calm, and real skill across pregnancy, birth, and postpartum.
Sundays, April 12 - June 14, 2026, online synchronous over Zoom Meetings, 10 AM EDT - 7 PM EDT; Note: we will not meet on Mother's Day - May 10.