What Does a Doula Really Do? (and What We Don’t)

 

If you’ve heard the word doula but aren’t totally sure what that means, you’re not alone.

Many families find me after a Google search that starts with something like:

  • “Do I need a doula?”

  • “What does a birth doula actually do?”

  • “Is a doula just for home birth?”

Let’s clear things up—plainly, honestly, and without hype.

A doula is not a replacement for your medical provider.
We’re also not a luxury item, a coach barking instructions, or someone who takes over your birth.

So what do doulas actually do? And just as importantly, what don’t we do?

What Is a Birth Doula?

A birth doula is a trained, non-medical professional who provides continuous emotional, physical, and informational support to a birthing person and their partner during pregnancy, labor, and birth.

The key word here is continuous.

Unlike nurses or midwives—who may rotate shifts, manage multiple patients, or focus on clinical tasks—a doula’s only job is to support you.

This support is rooted in:

  • Evidence-based birth practices

  • Respect for your autonomy and choices

  • Trust in the physiological process of birth

  • Compassion for the very real emotional experience of labor

Doulas work alongside doctors and midwives, not instead of them.

What Doulas Actually Do

1. Provide Emotional Support (Before, During, and After Birth)

Birth is not just physical—it’s deeply emotional.

A doula:

  • Helps normalize fears and uncertainty

  • Offers reassurance during intense or vulnerable moments

  • Holds calm, steady presence when things feel overwhelming

  • Supports both the birthing person and their partner

Sometimes this looks like encouragement.
Sometimes it looks like quiet grounding.
Sometimes it’s simply reminding you: you’re not alone.

2. Offer Physical Comfort Measures During Labor

This is the part many people picture—and yes, it matters.

Doulas are trained in hands-on comfort techniques, including:

  • Labor positioning and movement

  • Counterpressure and massage

  • Breath support and relaxation cues

  • Heat, cold, and comfort tools

  • Supporting rest and conservation of energy

These techniques aren’t random—they’re based on physiology and decades of birth experience.

And no, you don’t have to want an unmedicated birth for this to be helpful. Doulas support all types of births, including epidurals and cesareans.

3. Help You Understand Your Options (Without Telling You What to Do)

A doula does not make decisions for you.

Instead, we help you:

  • Understand common procedures and interventions

  • Ask informed questions

  • Explore benefits, risks, and alternatives

  • Feel confident advocating for yourself

This is often called informed consent, and it’s one of the most powerful tools in birth.

The goal isn’t a “perfect” birth—it’s a birth where you felt heard, respected, and involved in your care.

4. Support Partners So They Can Support You

We support both of you!

A doula can:

  • Help partners know what to do and when

  • Offer suggestions without pressure

  • Give partners breaks when needed

  • Encourage connection between partners during labor

Most partners tell me afterward:

“I felt more confident because you were there.”

5. Provide Evidence-Based Continuity of Care

Research consistently shows that continuous labor support—especially from a doula—is associated with:

  • Shorter labors

  • Reduced need for interventions

  • Lower cesarean rates

  • Higher satisfaction with the birth experience

(These findings come from large bodies of research, including Cochrane Reviews.)

But beyond the statistics, continuity matters because trust matters.

By the time labor begins, your doula already knows:

  • Your hopes and concerns

  • Your communication style

  • Your birth preferences

  • What helps you feel grounded

That relationship changes the experience in subtle but powerful ways.

What Doulas Do Not Do

This part is just as important.

❌ Doulas Do Not Provide Medical Care

We do not:

  • Perform exams

  • Monitor fetal heart tones

  • Give medical advice

  • Diagnose or treat conditions

That role belongs to your midwife or doctor.

❌ Doulas Do Not Replace Your Partner or Provider

A doula doesn’t take over your birth or speak for you.

We support you in communicating with your care team and making decisions that feel aligned with your values.

❌ Doulas Do Not Push a Specific Birth Agenda

A good doula does not pressure you toward:

  • Unmedicated birth

  • Home birth

  • Avoiding interventions at all costs

Your birth is your birth.  You know what is best for your family. Our role is to support your choices, whatever they may be, with respect and evidence-based information. 

Who Can Benefit from a Doula?

Short answer: all birthing people.

Doulas support:

  • All kinds of families!  first time, single parents, multiples, subsequent births

  • Families planning hospital, home, or birth center births

  • VBACs

  • Planned cesareans

  • High-risk pregnancies

  • People with medical or birth trauma or anxiety

Is a Doula Worth It?

Many families say the value of a doula wasn’t just what happened during labor—it was:

  • Feeling more prepared going into birth

  • Feeling supported when plans changed

  • Feeling grounded during intense moments

  • Feeling empowered afterward, regardless of outcome

Birth is one day—but how you feel about it can last a lifetime.

If you live in the Denver or Boulder area and you’re curious about what doula support could look like for your birth—your values, your choices and your experience-

A conversation can be a good place to start.  Reach out today!  I would love to connect.

Hanna Hill

Award-winning Durham, England, UK Birth and Family Photographer capturing lifestyle images of parenthood and documentary birth photojournalism.

https://www.hannahillphotography.com
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