
Women, Power, and Childbirth
A Case Study of a Free-Standing Birth Center
- 184 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Based on her 12 year study of a free-standing birth center, Turkel analyzes the medical model of childbirth in contrast to the midwifery model. In the medical model of birth, women are defined as patients and birth takes place in hospitals where women have little, if any, control over their experience. The midwifery model views birth as a healthy process where midwives act as teachers and guides for women during pregnancy and birth, helping women and their families to shape and define their experience to meet their needs and expectations. Under existing legal and cultural circumstances, free-standing birth centers face a dilemma. They must continually accomodate the medical model while trying to maintain the midwifery model and give women an option to home birth or to hospital birth.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Technocratic Ideology and the Medical Marginalization of Motherhood and Birth
- 3 The Medical Model
- 4 The Midwifery Approach to Birth
- 5 Free-Standing Birth Centers
- 6 Case Study: The Founding of a Free-Standing Birth Center
- 7 The Operation of the Birth Center
- 8 The Birth Center and the Medical Model: Accommodation and Resistance
- 9 Reappropriating Birth
- Bibliography
- Index