The professional boundaries between medical practitioners and midwives have traditionally been characterized as a gendered opposition between medical men and oppressed female midwives. Sociological analysis of the professional boundary suggests that there is increasing subtlety and change in this relationship. This paper, based on interviews with Australian midwives and doctors about their work and their views of each other, provides evidence of complexity in the operation of gender and professional power. Boundaries are managed on the basis of age, seniority, previous experience and philosophy as well as gender and profession. While medical specialists are described as holding traditional patriarchal views senior midwives increasingly dema...
This thesis examines how midwives have been doing professionalism in AotearoalNew Zealand since gain...
Females now outnumber males as medical graduates and general practice trainees in Australia. However...
Background: the maternity services reforms announced by the Australian government herald a process o...
A case study of twenty-nine midwives and nine obstetricians working in a regional, public sector Aus...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study examines the opinions of doctors and nurses regar...
Much of the literature claims that professional identities are largely crystalised, bounded, static ...
Findings from the Why do Midwives Leave? (WML) study evidenced divisions between midwives and their ...
Objective to identify and explore the emotion work of hospital-based midwives. Design an ethnographi...
While collaborative, multidisciplinary teamwork is widely espoused as the goal of contemporary hospi...
Background: poor relationships between maternity care professionals still contribute to poor outcome...
The distribution of work, knowledge, and responsibilities between doctors and nurses is a longstandi...
This research project sought to draw out the contesting definitions of collaborative care among prof...
Aim: This study investigated Australian midwives’ responses to the commencement of a national regist...
This thesis examines how midwives have been doing professionalism in Aotearoa/New Zealand since gain...
This paper analyses the history of the subordination of midwifery to medicine and nursing. With the...
This thesis examines how midwives have been doing professionalism in AotearoalNew Zealand since gain...
Females now outnumber males as medical graduates and general practice trainees in Australia. However...
Background: the maternity services reforms announced by the Australian government herald a process o...
A case study of twenty-nine midwives and nine obstetricians working in a regional, public sector Aus...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study examines the opinions of doctors and nurses regar...
Much of the literature claims that professional identities are largely crystalised, bounded, static ...
Findings from the Why do Midwives Leave? (WML) study evidenced divisions between midwives and their ...
Objective to identify and explore the emotion work of hospital-based midwives. Design an ethnographi...
While collaborative, multidisciplinary teamwork is widely espoused as the goal of contemporary hospi...
Background: poor relationships between maternity care professionals still contribute to poor outcome...
The distribution of work, knowledge, and responsibilities between doctors and nurses is a longstandi...
This research project sought to draw out the contesting definitions of collaborative care among prof...
Aim: This study investigated Australian midwives’ responses to the commencement of a national regist...
This thesis examines how midwives have been doing professionalism in Aotearoa/New Zealand since gain...
This paper analyses the history of the subordination of midwifery to medicine and nursing. With the...
This thesis examines how midwives have been doing professionalism in AotearoalNew Zealand since gain...
Females now outnumber males as medical graduates and general practice trainees in Australia. However...
Background: the maternity services reforms announced by the Australian government herald a process o...