Midwives’ position in maternal and newborn care (MNC) in the Netherlands is unique: unlike many other countries, they have retained the authority over risk assessment and referral. We studied why and how midwives formally gained their position as gatekeepers, a role formally granted in 1987 by the Study Group for the Revision of the Kloosterman List (SGKL), a group of representatives from all professions and organisations involved in Dutch MNC. We analysed the minutes of the SGKL’s meetings and conducted interviews with eight key-informants who were involved in the SGKL’s decision process. We used theories of professional boundary work and cultural theories of risk to analyse the negotiations regarding the authority over risk assessment and...
Background: Dutch maternity care is based on the principle that pregnancy and childbirth are physiol...
Collaboration between different groups of health care professionals is often rooted in a long and of...
The Dutch obstetrical system rests on the assumption that pregnancy and birth are normal life-events...
Midwives’ position in maternal and newborn care (MNC) in the Netherlands is unique: unlike many othe...
Midwives’ position in maternal and newborn care (MNC) in the Netherlands is unique: unlike many othe...
While the organisation of work in maternity care has historically witnessed boundary work between mi...
This thesis is the product of an ethnographic discourse analysis of midwifery talk and practice, and...
An effective system of risk selection is a global necessity to ensure women and children receive app...
Risk is a dominant discourse in current formations of Western society. This thesis examines how risk...
The concept of risk is pervasive in contemporary discussions of childbirth –both amongst professiona...
Introduction: In the Dutch maternity care system, the role division between independently practising...
A case study of twenty-nine midwives and nine obstetricians working in a regional, public sector Aus...
Pregnant women and their birth partners require detailed, evidence-based information from healthcare...
Home births in high risk pregnancies and unassisted childbirth seem to be increasing in the Netherla...
Abstract Background Home births in high risk pregnancies and unassisted childbirth seem to be increa...
Background: Dutch maternity care is based on the principle that pregnancy and childbirth are physiol...
Collaboration between different groups of health care professionals is often rooted in a long and of...
The Dutch obstetrical system rests on the assumption that pregnancy and birth are normal life-events...
Midwives’ position in maternal and newborn care (MNC) in the Netherlands is unique: unlike many othe...
Midwives’ position in maternal and newborn care (MNC) in the Netherlands is unique: unlike many othe...
While the organisation of work in maternity care has historically witnessed boundary work between mi...
This thesis is the product of an ethnographic discourse analysis of midwifery talk and practice, and...
An effective system of risk selection is a global necessity to ensure women and children receive app...
Risk is a dominant discourse in current formations of Western society. This thesis examines how risk...
The concept of risk is pervasive in contemporary discussions of childbirth –both amongst professiona...
Introduction: In the Dutch maternity care system, the role division between independently practising...
A case study of twenty-nine midwives and nine obstetricians working in a regional, public sector Aus...
Pregnant women and their birth partners require detailed, evidence-based information from healthcare...
Home births in high risk pregnancies and unassisted childbirth seem to be increasing in the Netherla...
Abstract Background Home births in high risk pregnancies and unassisted childbirth seem to be increa...
Background: Dutch maternity care is based on the principle that pregnancy and childbirth are physiol...
Collaboration between different groups of health care professionals is often rooted in a long and of...
The Dutch obstetrical system rests on the assumption that pregnancy and birth are normal life-events...