Observant and learning.
Tasha Brown, CNM, WHGRNP, MMCHW
she/her/hers
I am a Philadelphia native, who relocated to Milwaukee in 2015 and started my journey to becoming a Certified Nurse Midwife shortly thereafter. I bring five years of experience supporting families in a low to moderate risk hospital setting, where I honed the critical thinking and hands-on skills needed to provide safe, thoughtful, and nurturing care in the comfort of your home. My approach is rooted in trust, inclusivity, and honoring your unique journey, ensuring that you feel supported, empowered, and confident throughout your home birth experience. Together, we’ll create a space where your voice is heard, and your choices are celebrated.
Education and Experience
In addition to her hospital-based practice, Tasha offers out-of-hospital fertility services such as intrauterine insemination (IUI), preconception counseling, placenta encapsulation, and postpartum support. Her journey into home birth began through mentorship with midwives in Georgia and Milwaukee, deepening her commitment to community-centered birth work.
Before becoming a midwife, Tasha gained experience as a postpartum nurse, community health nurse, and medical-surgical nurse. These roles allowed her to build expertise in newborn care, family education, school health, and hospital-based patient care. Together, her background and experiences inform the holistic, inclusive, and deeply compassionate approach she brings to midwifery today.
Tasha holds a Master of Science in Nursing from Georgetown University, where she completed a dual certification in Nurse-Midwifery and Women’s Health/Gender-Related Nurse Practitioner in December 2019. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Nursing from La Salle University in May 2013. Since 2020, Tasha has worked as a full-scope Certified Nurse Midwife in a hospital setting, providing comprehensive reproductive health care including gynecologic services, prenatal, birth, and postpartum care, as well as STI treatment, perinatal mental health support, and limited ultrasounds. She has also contributed to medical education, teaching students on subjects related to birth and social justice.