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Newborn Care Network Introduces Clinical Standard to Bridge the Six-Week Postpartum Gap
Let Mommy Sleep
Let Mommy Sleep deploys Registered Nurses and newborn care specialists as a coordinated team, addressing what a new workforce policy paper calls a systemic absence of in-home support standards
WASHINGTON, Mar. 25, 2026 / PRZen / The gap no one is talking about:
In most states, hospital discharge happens within 48-72 hours of giving birth and birth mothers do not see a medical provider again for six weeks
That gap is the highest-risk period of the postpartum phase
According to a new workforce policy paper published on SSRN, it is almost entirely unsupported by the formal healthcare system
Let Mommy Sleep has built its model of care around closing that gap. During the first week home from the hospital, a Registered Nurse provides an in-home postpartum visit: newborn assessment and teaching, feeding support and maternal health screenings. Families then transition to overnight care with a newborn care specialist. The RN and specialist communicate throughout the family’s engagement, ensuring clinical oversight and hands-on care work together.
“During the first week home with a newborn, early intervention is a critical support for maternal health and overall safety. We built the RN model of care because the line between support and medical need after birth can be blurry so having a licensed medical professional in first ensures that needed care is within the providers scope of practice” — Denise Iacona Stern, Founder and CEO, Let Mommy Sleep
The model is documented in The State of Newborn Care in the United States: Gaps in Oversight and the Need for Standardization, a workforce policy paper authored by Stern and published on SSRN in January 2026.
The paper identifies three critical gaps in the newborn care profession:
The in-home newborn care profession: night nannies, newborn care specialists, postpartum doulas, and baby nurses, remains largely unregulated
This creates a preventable safety risk for families
Caregivers have no professional protections if their care is called into question
The State of Newborn Care was written to draw legislative attention to these gaps.
To put the words of the policy paper into action, Let Mommy Sleep has launched NewbornCareSpecialists.com, a resource that provides verifiable credentials for caregivers and covers the Let Mommy Sleep RN-to-specialist care model. Through policy advocacy and real-world resources, Let Mommy Sleep aims to elevate postpartum care in the U.S.
About Let Mommy Sleep Let Mommy Sleep has supported more than 100,000 families across 26 territories nationwide since 2010. The company is nationally recognized with a TITAN Women in Business Award and 2025 Moms Choice Award.
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