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020 _a0-7735-2689-7 (bnd)
020 _a0-7735-2690-0 (pbk)
040 _cddc
041 _aEnglish
082 _a362.198 200 971
100 _a Ivy Lynn Bourgeault
222 _aCommon terms and phrases Aboriginal communities Aboriginal midwifery Aboriginal midwives Aboriginal women Alberta apprenticeship Association attended baby Benoit birth at home birth centres birth movement birthing women Bourgeault British Columbia Canadian caregiver cent childbirth choice clients clinical CLSCs College of Midwives cultural Davis-Floyd direct-entry doctors educational programs experience feminist give birth groups health care system Heritage Minute history of midwifery home birth hospital birth immigrant midwives integration Inuit issues Kaufert knowledge labour Laurentian University Manitoba maternity medicine ment mid midwifery care midwifery community midwifery in Canada Midwifery in Ontario midwifery practice midwifery services midwifery training Ministry of Health model of midwifery needs neighbour midwife Nova Scotia nurse-midwifery nurse-midwives nurses obstetrical Ontario Midwifery Ontario Midwives physicians political practitioners preceptors pregnancy Press professional province Quebec registered regulation relationships role Ryerson University sages-femmes social tion Toronto traditional midwifery University wifery wives woman women's health
_bCommon terms and phrases Aboriginal communities Aboriginal midwifery Aboriginal midwives Aboriginal women Alberta apprenticeship Association attended baby Benoit birth at home birth centres birth movement birthing women Bourgeault British Columbia Canadian caregiver cent childbirth choice clients clinical CLSCs College of Midwives cultural Davis-Floyd direct-entry doctors educational programs experience feminist give birth groups health care system Heritage Minute history of midwifery home birth hospital birth immigrant midwives integration Inuit issues Kaufert knowledge labour Laurentian University Manitoba maternity medicine ment mid midwifery care midwifery community midwifery in Canada Midwifery in Ontario midwifery practice midwifery services midwifery training Ministry of Health model of midwifery needs neighbour midwife Nova Scotia nurse-midwifery nurse-midwives nurses obstetrical Ontario Midwifery Ontario Midwives physicians political practitioners preceptors pregnancy Press professional province Quebec registered regulation relationships role Ryerson University sages-femmes social tion Toronto traditional midwifery University wifery wives woman women's health
245 _aReconceiving midwifery
260 _aMontreal & Kingston • London • Ithaca
_bMcGill–Queen’s University Press |
_c2004
300 _a348 Pages
300 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
520 _aMidwifery in the developed world is in a state of ferment and change - a phenomenon referred to as the "new midwifery."Reconceiving Midwiferyoffers state-of-the-art analyses of the new midwifery as it is practiced. The authors - social scientists and midwifery practitioners - reflect on regional differences in the emerging profession, providing a systematic account of its historical, local, and international roots, its evolving regulatory status, and the degree to which it has been integrated into health care systems. They also examine the nature of midwifery training, accessibility, and effectiveness across diverse ethnic and socio-economic groups, highlighting the key issues facing the profession before, during, and in the immediate post-integration era in each province.
600 _xMidwifery Canada.
600 _x Midwifery Canada History
700 _dCecilia Benoit
700 _dRobbie Davis-Floyd
942 _cEB
_n0
999 _c29976
_d29976