The vast majority of births occur in hospitals attended by physicians. However, this has not always been the case. Prior to the turn of the twentieth century, home births held the majority and were primarily attended by midwives, the majority of whom were women of color and immigrant women. The move toward hospital birth is rarely discussed today and midwifery and home birth, though now both experiencing a small comeback, are often viewed with skepticism and fear. This Note discusses the raced and gendered history of this change in American birth norms and argues that the racist and sexist motivations and phenomena that prompted the move into hospitals and away from midwives is relevant to understanding current birth trends and statistics. ...
From the colonial period to the Great Depression, lay midwives attended a large proportion of delive...
Birthing people in the United States pay more than citizens of other high-income countries and recei...
Graduation date: 1983Increasing demand for home birth has created an upheaval in the\ud American med...
An analysis of the shift from midwifery to doctor/hospital births in the American South, from 1900 t...
While sociologists have long explored health and illness, much of it has been androcentric and White...
In this paper I examine why some women in the United States choose midwife attended homebirth over t...
Within the last decade, historical and contemporary accounts of midwives, along with the efficacy of...
Within the last decade, historical and contemporary accounts of midwives, along with the efficacy of...
Maternal and infant mortality rates have progressively worsened in the United States, disproportiona...
Maternal and infant mortality rates have progressively worsened in the United States, disproportiona...
From the colonial period to the Great Depression, lay midwives attended a large proportion of delive...
Whether stemming from a desire to obtain more control over the birth process, an attempt to achieve ...
For the great majority of American women, the right to choose the place and manner of giving birth h...
Midwifery has re-emerged as a birthing system and women are again seeking midwives as their birth at...
Childbirth in the present day United States is becoming increasingly scrutinized as women question w...
From the colonial period to the Great Depression, lay midwives attended a large proportion of delive...
Birthing people in the United States pay more than citizens of other high-income countries and recei...
Graduation date: 1983Increasing demand for home birth has created an upheaval in the\ud American med...
An analysis of the shift from midwifery to doctor/hospital births in the American South, from 1900 t...
While sociologists have long explored health and illness, much of it has been androcentric and White...
In this paper I examine why some women in the United States choose midwife attended homebirth over t...
Within the last decade, historical and contemporary accounts of midwives, along with the efficacy of...
Within the last decade, historical and contemporary accounts of midwives, along with the efficacy of...
Maternal and infant mortality rates have progressively worsened in the United States, disproportiona...
Maternal and infant mortality rates have progressively worsened in the United States, disproportiona...
From the colonial period to the Great Depression, lay midwives attended a large proportion of delive...
Whether stemming from a desire to obtain more control over the birth process, an attempt to achieve ...
For the great majority of American women, the right to choose the place and manner of giving birth h...
Midwifery has re-emerged as a birthing system and women are again seeking midwives as their birth at...
Childbirth in the present day United States is becoming increasingly scrutinized as women question w...
From the colonial period to the Great Depression, lay midwives attended a large proportion of delive...
Birthing people in the United States pay more than citizens of other high-income countries and recei...
Graduation date: 1983Increasing demand for home birth has created an upheaval in the\ud American med...