Books on the topic 'Maternity choices'

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1

Schermack, Barbara. Childbirth choices in Rhode Island: A guide to the childbearing year. Providence, R.I. (90 Printery St., Providence 02904): Rhode Island Women's Health Collective, 1990.

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2

Centre, King's Fund. Maternity care: Choice, continuity and change : consensus statement. London: King's Fund Centre, 1993.

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3

Northern Ireland Maternity Unit. Study Group. Delivering choice: Midwife and general practitioner led maternity units. Belfast: DHSS, 1994.

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4

Spain, Armelle. Le " timing" de la première maternité: Recension des écrits. Québec: Groupe de recherche multidisciplinaire féministe, Université Laval, 1987.

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5

1963-, Hayden Sara, and Hallstein D. Lynn O'Brien, eds. Contemporary maternity in an era of choice: Explorations into discourses of reproduction. Lanham, Md: Lexington Books, 2010.

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6

Hayden, Sara. Contemplating maternity in an era of choice: Explorations into discourses of reproduction. Lanham, Md: Lexington Books, 2010.

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7

McIlwaine, Gillian. Increasing choice in maternity care in Scotland: Issues for purchasers and providers. Glasgow: Scottish Forum for Public Health Medicine, 1994.

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8

Signorelli, Amalia, and Anna Oppo. Maternità, identità, scelte: Percorsi dell'emancipazione femminile nel Mezzogiorno. Napoli: Liguori, 2000.

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9

The timing of motherhood. Lexington, Mass: Lexington Books, 1986.

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10

Walter, Carolyn Ambler. The timing of motherhood. Lexington, Mass: D.C. Heath, 1986.

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11

Great Britain. Department of Health., ed. Government response to House of Commons Health Committee Reports: Fourth Report, session 2002-03 - Provision of maternity services; Eighth Report, session 2002-03 - Inequalities in access to maternity services; and Ninth Report, session 2002-03 - Choice in maternity services. Norwich: TSO, 2004.

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12

(Editor), Ali Kubba, Joseph S. Sanfilippo (Editor), and Naomi Hampton (Editor), eds. Contraception and Office Gynecology: Choices in Reproductive Healthcare. Bailliere Tindall, 1999.

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13

Council, Salford Community Health, ed. Report of a survey undertaken by the Women & Child Health Working Party into choices in maternity care for Salford women, January - October 1991. Salford: Salford Community Health Council, 1992.

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14

Ferrarella, Marie. Dad by Choice (Maitland Maternity) (Maitland Maternity). Silhouette, 2000.

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15

Roth, Louise Marie. The Business of Birth. NYU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479812257.001.0001.

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The Business of Birth examines the effects of malpractice and reproductive rights laws on maternity care practices in the US from 1995 to 2015. It is a common public belief that frivolous malpractice claims and women’s choices shape hospital birth practices. This book uses mixed methods to demonstrate that this belief is inaccurate. The Business of Birth carefully documents how there are interconnected systems of laws and policies, or legal “regimes,” that influence birth practices in unexpected ways. When it comes to malpractice, the standard of care that defines malpractice is internal to the medical profession. This means that tort laws do not exert the external pressure that physicians believe they do, although professional associations, liability insurers, risk managers, and hospital legal counsel reinforce a fear of liability risk. This fear can encourage obstetricians to intervene into labor and birth with scientifically unsupported technology or procedures with known risks. But reducing liability risk can encourage risky practices that promote organizational efficiency over patient safety. The Business of Birth also examines the implications of reproductive rights laws for maternity care practices, defining states that protect women’s reproductive rights as woman-centered and those that protect fetuses as fetus-centered. Reproductive justice theory argues that pregnant women’s rights during childbirth are connected to laws governing the full spectrum of reproduction. Woman-centered approaches to pregnancy and abortion promote choice, informed consent, and the right to bodily integrity when women give birth, while fetus-centered regimes limit women’s rights and choices during birth.
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16

Choice in Maternity Services. Stationery Office, The, 2003.

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17

Choice in Maternity Services. Stationery Office, The, 2003.

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18

Mavis, Kirkham, ed. Informed choice in maternity care. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.

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19

Informed Choice in Maternity Care. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.

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20

Symon, Andrew. Risk and Choice in Maternity Care. Churchill Livingstone, 2007.

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21

Dad By Choice. (Maitland Maternity Series). New York: Paperback, 2008.

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22

Conference, King's Fund Centre, and Great Britain. Department of Health., eds. Maternity care: Choice, continuity and change : consensus statement. London: King's Fund Centre, 1993.

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23

Risk and choice in maternity care: An international perspective. [Edinburgh]: Churchill Livingstone Elsevier, 2006.

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24

Joan, Kirkham Mavis, Stapleton Helen, and NHS Centre for Reviews & Dissemination., eds. Informed choice in maternity care: An evaluation of evidence based leaflets. York: NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, 2001.

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25

Castellanos, Rosario. On Feminine Culture (1950). Translated by Carlos Alberto Sánchez. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190601294.003.0016.

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Sobre cultura femenina is Rosario Castellanos’s first attempt to champion women’s right to participate in the production of culture through certain forms of personal expression. Her argument centers on the notion that culture is a refuge for those who have been exiled from maternity, that is, that the realm of cultural production is reserved for those who are incapable or have chosen not to participate in the giving of human life. Because culture requires egoism and, since maternity is the ultimate rejection of egoism, women can participate in one or the other, but, she suggests, not both. Her immediate concern seems to be with those women who have a choice between maternity and producing culture and have chosen the latter. These women have been devalued and marginalized from opportunities that contribute to meaningful cultural production, a marginalization owed to those structures of patriarchy that have existed since antiquity.
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26

Hayden, Sara, Jennifer J. Bute, Kirsten J. Broadfoot, and Patrice Buzzanell. Contemplating Maternity in an Era of Choice: Explorations into Discourses of Reproduction. Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, 2010.

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27

Daddy By Choice (Maternity Row) (Silhouette Intimate Moments No. 998) (Intimate Moments, No 998). Silhouette, 2000.

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28

Day, Megan. New Mom, New Job: How to Make the Right Choice When Maternity Leave Leaves You Wondering. Morgan James Publishing, 2020.

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29

Solinger, Rickie. Reproduction, Birth Control, and Motherhood in the United States. Edited by Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor and Lisa G. Materson. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190222628.013.20.

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The history of reproductive politics in the United States incorporates several centuries of struggle and resistance and virtually no periods of quiescence. The state and other institutions have frequently clashed within and against each other and with girls and women, over who has primary power to govern female sexuality, fertility, and maternity: institutions, or women themselves. These struggles have always been racialized. From the eighteenth century forward, authorities have promulgated laws and public policies embedding population-control aims, investing some groups with greater reproductive value than others. In the modern era, “choice” emerged as the mark of reproductive freedom, chiefly defined as the right to limit and terminate pregnancy. More recently, “reproductive justice” contends that all people have the human right to be a parent; to forgo parenting; and to access the resources required to exercise the first two rights with dignity and safety.
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