Guidelines & Tools

Useful tools and guidelines for registered midwives.

​After receiving a written complaint, the Council will investigate the allegations. The nature of an investigation depends on the type and severity of the allegations. This Guide for Responding to a Complaint will help midwives with navigating the next steps.

This is the second version (2024) of the Midwife Self-Assessment Tool that was originally developed in 2021-22 by the Professional Practice Committee of the Canadian Midwifery Regulators Council (CMRC). The tool is intended to facilitate self-assessment and reflection by registered midwives across the following non-clinical roles: Professional, Advocate, Communicator, Collaborator and Learner. CMRC recognises there are other existing mechanisms to assess clinical competency.

The Midwifery Regulatory Council of Nova Scotia (MRCNS) recognizes that if a registrant has become unable to practise safely, ethically or competently because they are suffering from an incapacity, a voluntary alternative to the disciplinary process focused on achieving public protection through remediation should be available. This process is called the “Fitness to Practise (FTP)” program.

Midwives in clinical practice must fulfil all requirements of the MRCNS Quality Assurance Program for annual licence renewal, in addition to the requirements for continuing competence in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), neonatal resuscitation (NRP), emergency skills (ES) and fetal health surveillance (FHS).

Midwives must complete and submit a Quality Assurance Program Annual Record with their application for annual licence renewal by March 1st of each year.