Nursing faculty Lori Hubbard ’95 hosts regional perinatal conference with Elon Nursing Fellows presenting

Assistant Professor of Nursing Lori Hubbard served as conference planning chairperson for the 2025 29th Annual Perinatal Partnership Conference held Sept. 7-9. Undergraduate research students and Nursing Fellows Julia Ricker and Gabi Carlson presented at the poster session during the conference.

Bags were packed all over North Carolina and South Carolina as nurses, social workers, doulas and perinatal health educators were set to meet in Cherokee, NC for three days of learning, networking, and fellowship. Abruptly, Hurricane Helene halted all plans two days before the scheduled start of the 2024 29th Annual NC/SC Perinatal Partnership Conference. Fast forward one year, and the conference was finally held Sept. 7-9, 2025, with Lori Hubbard, assistant professor in the Department of Nursing, serving as the planning committee chairperson.

Loris Hubbard, assistant professor of nursing.

The North Carolina Perinatal Association (NCPA) was formed in 1987 as an interdisciplinary organization to promote advocacy and address educational needs of health professionals dedicated to serving mothers, infants and persons of childbearing age across the state. The primary educational event each year is a partnership with the South Carolina Perinatal Association to host the annual conference, alternating between North Carolina and South Carolina as the event location. DHubbard, as immediate past President of NCPA was primed to take the lead to organize all aspects of the conference, having attended many of the organization’s conferences in the past. She fondly remembers being recruited into the organization and onto the Board of Directors while presenting a poster at the Perinatal Partnership Conference in 2017.

Nursing Fellow Julia Ricker

The NCPA and SCPA chapters held their annual business meetings at corresponding luncheons, and 20 professional and non-profit vendors were on hand at the conference to network with attendees. However, a personal highlight of the Perinatal Partnership Conference this year was the opportunity Hubbard was able to offer two senior Nursing Fellows to be featured in the poster session. Julia Ricker presented “Influence of Maternal Age and Level of Education on Childbirth Self-Efficacy in the Dominican Republic” and Gabrielle Carlson presented “Source of Childbirth Education, Type of Birth, and Childbirth Self-Efficacy in the Dominican Republic.”

Nursing Fellow Gabrielle Carson

Both of these projects represent the ongoing work of Ricker and Carlson to collaborate with Hubbard in the analysis of data collected in summer 2024 through a Hultquist new faculty grant exploring childbirth self-efficacy in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic. Through a partnership with Second Chance Global, Inc. and their pregnancy support centers and outreach, Hubbard is exploring cultural and familial factors surrounding the cesarean section birth rate in the DR, which is one of the highest in the Caribbean and the world.

Hubbard has held several roles within NCPA. One of her first duties on the Board of Directors was to coordinate a campaign to support hospitals and health departments to host screenings of “The Dark Side of the Full Moon,” a documentary highlighting the arduous journey of women with postpartum depression and to equip perinatal care providers with tools to support this vulnerable population of new parents. Having seen great success with a documentary screening project in the past, the first session of the Perinatal Partnership Conference that Hubbard scheduled was the screening of the documentary “High-Risk: Black Mothers Protecting Themselves and Their Babies.” Both the writer and producer joined attendees for a robust Q&A session. The 116 attendees were also treated to keynote presentations from internationally recognized speakers sharing knowledge about infertility, digital innovations to reach marginalized and rural patients, the dangerous rise in syphilis in pregnant women and ways to provide culturally sensitive perinatal care to indigenous Native American women.

Popular breakout sessions addressed pelvic health, care of late preterm newborns, the respectful maternity care initiative and obesity in pregnancy. The conference will rotate to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina in 2026 with another chairperson at the helm.