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1
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0003837880
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See Judith Walzer Leavitt New York: Oxford University Press
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See Judith Walzer Leavitt, Brought to Bed: Childbearing in America, 1750-1950 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986)
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(1986)
Brought to Bed: Childbearing in America
, pp. 1750-1950
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-
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2
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0024997025
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"The Role of Obstetrical Rituals in the Resolution of Cultural Anomaly,"
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10.1016/0277-9536(90)90060-6 and Birth as an American Rite of Passage (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1994)
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Robbie Davis-Floyd, "The Role of Obstetrical Rituals in the Resolution of Cultural Anomaly," Social Science and Medicine 31 (1990): 175-89, and Birth as an American Rite of Passage (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1994). 10.1016/0277-9536(90)90060-6
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(1990)
Social Science and Medicine
, vol.31
, pp. 175-189
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Davis-Floyd, R.1
Robbie2
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3
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9744283900
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see also
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Leavitt, Brought to Bed, 5; see also 171-95.
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Brought to Bed
, vol.5
, pp. 171-195
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Leavitt1
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4
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0000895501
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"Fetal Images: The Power of Visual Culture in the Politics of Reproduction,"
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reprinted in The Gender Sexuality Reader, ed. Roger N. Lancaster and Micaela di Leonardo (New York: Routledge, 1997), 134-50
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Rosalind Petchesky, "Fetal Images: The Power of Visual Culture in the Politics of Reproduction," Feminist Studies, 13 (1987): 263-92; reprinted in The Gender Sexuality Reader, ed. Roger N. Lancaster and Micaela di Leonardo (New York: Routledge, 1997), 134-50.
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(1987)
Feminist Studies
, vol.13
, pp. 263-292
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Petchesky, R.1
Rosalind2
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5
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0028230111
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"The Technocratic Body: American Childbirth as Cultural Expression,"
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10.1016/0277-9536(94)90228-3
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Robbie Davis-Floyd, "The Technocratic Body: American Childbirth as Cultural Expression," Social Science and Medicine 38 (1994): 1125-40. 10.1016/0277-9536(94)90228-3
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(1994)
Social Science and Medicine
, vol.38
, pp. 1125-1140
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Davis-Floyd, R.1
Robbie2
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6
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0004099169
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The American Way of Birth
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New York: Penguin-Dutton
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Jessica Mitford 1992 The American Way of Birth Penguin-Dutton New York
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(1992)
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Mitford, J.1
Jessica2
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8
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20444403513
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note
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Because of the increasing social influence of risk as a concept, the parameters of any investigation of risk and obstetrical practice are quite large. This essay represents an initial conceptualization of how to think through the construction of risk in obstetrics and does not thoroughly address the social pressures on physicians to overcome all of the potential difficulties of childbirth to produce perfect babies. My starting point is that risk is a concept produced through specific practices; in obstetrics, its meanings are linked to social expectations and the technologies that often represent, and incite, those expectations.
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11
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20444402043
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"Constructing Risk: Maternity Care, Law, and Malpractice," Raymond Devries
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ed. Raymod Devries, et al. New York: Routledge
-
Elizabeth Cartwright Jan Thomas 2001 "Constructing Risk: Maternity Care, Law, and Malpractice," Raymond Devries Birth by Design: Pregnancy, Maternity Care, and Midwifery in North America and Europe, ed. Raymod Devries, et al. Routledge New York 218
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(2001)
Birth By Design: Pregnancy, Maternity Care, and Midwifery in North America and Europe
, pp. 218
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Cartwright, E.1
Thomas, J.2
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16
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0003945965
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New York: W. W. Norton and "Spoiling the Pregnancy: Prenatal Diagnosis in the Netherlands," in Birth by Design
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Barbara Katz Rothman, In Labor: Women and Power in the Birthplace (New York: W. W. Norton, 1982) and "Spoiling the Pregnancy: Prenatal Diagnosis in the Netherlands," in Birth by Design, 180-198.
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(1982)
Labor: Women and Power in the Birthplace
, pp. 180-198
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Rothman, B.K.1
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17
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20444365614
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"The Technocratic Body"
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Davis-Floyd, "The Technocratic Body," 1125.
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-
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Davis-Floyd1
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18
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85134933420
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"The Logic of Heartbeats: Electronic Fetal Monitoring and Biomedically Constructed Birth,"
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See eds. Robbie Davis-Floyd and Joseph Dumit (New York: Routledge, 1998) for an interesting discussion of practice in medicine
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See Elizabeth Cartwright, "The Logic of Heartbeats: Electronic Fetal Monitoring and Biomedically Constructed Birth," in Cyborg Babies: From Techno-sex to Techno-tots," eds. Robbie Davis-Floyd and Joseph Dumit (New York: Routledge, 1998), 240-54, for an interesting discussion of practice in medicine.
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Cyborg Babies: From Techno-sex to Techno-tots
, pp. 240-254
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Cartwright, E.1
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19
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20444423046
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All evidence presented here concerning EFM, its efficacy and relation to outcomes, was originally presented in the lecture, unless otherwise noted
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All evidence presented here concerning EFM, its efficacy and relation to outcomes, was originally presented in the lecture, unless otherwise noted.
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21
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20444370052
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note
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Electronic fetal monitors are not always strapped in place; they can be held to the mother's abdomen by hand. According to Cartwright, the "logic" of the monitor is to constrain the mother's ability to change position and to free up labor attendants to care for numerous mothers at the same time (Ibid., 246).
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22
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20444396342
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See also Philadelphia F. A Davis
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See also Michael Benson, Obstetrical Pearls (Philadelphia: F.A. Davis, 1994)
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(1994)
Obstetrical Pearls
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Benson, M.1
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23
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20444367063
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"Constructing Risk"
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quoted in American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology
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quoted in Cartwright "Constructing Risk," 223; American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology
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-
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Cartwright1
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24
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20444415018
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"Fetal Heart Rate Patterns: Monitoring, Interpretation, and Management,"
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July
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Thomas "Fetal Heart Rate Patterns: Monitoring, Interpretation, and Management," Technical Bulletin 207 (July 1995)
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(1995)
Technical Bulletin
, vol.207
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Thomas1
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25
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20444410193
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"Logic of Heartbeats"
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cited in
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cited in Cartwright, "Logic of Heartbeats" 244
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Cartwright1
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27
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20444372064
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"Caesarean Section: Who Chooses" The Woman or Her Doctor? "
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ed. Donna L. Dickenson Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Because most c-sections are performed as a result of perceived danger to the infant if born vaginally or if the pregnancy were to continue longer, it is more difficult to assess the relative danger of surgical birth on infants. However, it is well known that infants born surgically often experience respiratory distress, as their lungs have not been massaged by the process of labor
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Wendy Savage 2002 "Caesarean Section: Who Chooses"The Woman or Her Doctor?,ed. Donna L. Dickenson Ethical Issues in Maternal-Fetal Medicine Cambridge University Press Cambridge 264-267 Because most c-sections are performed as a result of perceived danger to the infant if born vaginally or if the pregnancy were to continue longer, it is more difficult to assess the relative danger of surgical birth on infants. However, it is well known that infants born surgically often experience respiratory distress, as their lungs have not been massaged by the process of labor.
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(2002)
Ethical Issues in Maternal-Fetal Medicine
, pp. 264-267
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Savage, W.1
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28
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20444367063
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"Constructing Risk"
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emphasis in original
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Cartwright and Thomas, "Constructing Risk," 224. emphasis in original
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Cartwright1
Thomas2
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29
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20444391832
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See also Ibid
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See also Ibid., 222.
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30
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20444410193
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"Logic of Heartbeats"
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Cartwright, "Logic of Heartbeats," 246.
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-
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Cartwright1
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32
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20444410193
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"Logic of Heartbeats"
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Cartwright, "Logic of Heartbeats," 247
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-
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Cartwright1
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33
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20444365614
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"The Technocratic Body"
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see also for women's perspectives
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see also Davis-Floyd, "The Technocratic Body," 1137 for women's perspectives
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-
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Davis-Floyd1
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34
-
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20444423045
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"Caesarian Section"
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For a discussion of the ethics of elective cesarean section, see
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For a discussion of the ethics of elective cesarean section, see Savage, "Caesarian Section."
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-
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Savage1
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35
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20444363584
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Franklin Park, IL: La Leche League Internation
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Kaye Lowman 1978 The LLLove Story La Leche League Internation Franklin Park, IL 88
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(1978)
The LLLove Story
, pp. 88
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Lowman, K.1
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37
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20444376654
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"What (and Why) Do Women Want? The Desires of Women and the Design of Maternity Care"
-
Raymond DeVries et al., "What (and Why) Do Women Want? The Desires of Women and the Design of Maternity Care," in Birth by Design, 259.
-
Birth By Design
, pp. 259
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De Vries, R.1
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38
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20444365614
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"The Technocratic Body"
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Davis-Floyd, "The Technocratic Body," 1126-32;
-
-
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Davis-Floyd1
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39
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20444364643
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see also for a discussion of how what women want in maternity care is affected by what they are offered by medical professionals
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see also DeVries, et al. for a discussion of how what women want in maternity care is affected by what they are offered by medical professionals.
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-
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De Vries1
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42
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20444366704
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note
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The question for Leavitt concerns who manages the birth situation and thus dominates its meanings for women: "Childbirth is more than a biological event in women's lives. It is a vital component in the social definition of womanhood. Historically, women's physiological ability to bear children and men's inability to do so have contributed to defining the places each held in the social order. The sexual differentiation between women and men fostered a cultural division of labor based on these biological distinctions, a division that allocated the domestic sphere to women and the public sphere to men" (3). Thus, the very beginning of Brought to Bed establishes sexual difference as grounded in biology and the cultural meanings of childbirth to be attached to this biological foundation. Leavitt later writes: "My historical interests in the interactions between medicine and society developed into a specific interest in the history of childbirth as a direct result of my personal confinement experiences. During the hours of labor and delivery I understood and accepted a bond with biological womanhood..." (5).
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44
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20444368945
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Apparently regardless of the effect on actual outcomes
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Apparently regardless of the effect on actual outcomes
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-
-
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46
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20444423045
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"Caesarian Section"
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See for a discussion of these points
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See Savage, "Caesarian Section," 266-68, for a discussion of these points.
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-
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Savage1
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47
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0003427994
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states the risk as 1 in 225 for having a Down syndrome baby and 1 in 200 for having a miscarriage caused by the amniocentesis for a woman aged 36 New York: Random House-Vintage
-
Michael Bérubé states the risk as 1 in 225 for having a Down syndrome baby and 1 in 200 for having a miscarriage caused by the amniocentesis for a woman aged 36. Life as We Know It: A Father, A Family, and an Exceptional Child (New York: Random House-Vintage, 1996), 6-7.
-
(1996)
Life As We Know It: A Father, A Family, and an Exceptional Child
, pp. 6-7
-
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Michael Bérubé1
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48
-
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20444402390
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note
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In making this point I am neither arguing against amniocentesis nor against elective abortion in the case of a positive Down's diagnosis (or in any other case).
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-
-
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49
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20444383291
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See for an excellent discussion of trisomy and for a discussion of the issue of abortion as a response to detection of chromosomal anomalies (40-94). For a good, brief history of the development of amniocentesis as a technology
-
See Bérubé, Life, for an excellent discussion of trisomy 21 (17-24) and for a discussion of the issue of abortion as a response to detection of chromosomal anomalies (40-94). For a good, brief history of the development of amniocentesis as a technology
-
Life
, vol.21
, pp. 17-24
-
-
Bérubé1
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52
-
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20444362157
-
-
see also pp. 170-95 for a general discussion of the impact on women of moving birth from home to hospital
-
Leavitt, Brought to Bed, 174, 194; see also pp. 170-95 for a general discussion of the impact on women of moving birth from home to hospital.
-
Brought to Bed
, vol.174
, pp. 194
-
-
Leavitt1
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54
-
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20444365614
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"The Technocratic Body"
-
Davis-Floyd, "The Technocratic Body," 1137.
-
-
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Davis-Floyd1
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55
-
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0003720760
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Mother-Infant Bonding: A Scientific Fiction
-
The simple answer to this last question may be that ordinary American mothers got their wishes answered when their husbands were allowed access to the delivery room and hospitals responded to the threat of the home birth movement by providing birthing centers and other more homey birth options. For example, see (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992)
-
The simple answer to this last question may be that ordinary American mothers got their wishes answered when their husbands were allowed access to the delivery room and hospitals responded to the threat of the home birth movement by providing birthing centers and other more homey birth options. For example, see Diane Eyer, Mother-Infant Bonding: A Scientific Fiction (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992)
-
-
-
Eyer, D.1
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56
-
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0141933775
-
-
see also Melbourne, Australia: University of Melbourne Press esp. and 212-37, for a discussion of the childbirth education movement in Australia
-
see also Kerreen M. Reiger, Our Bodies, Our Babies: The Forgotten Women's Movement (Melbourne, Australia: University of Melbourne Press, 2001), esp. 62-83 and 212-37, for a discussion of the childbirth education movement in Australia.
-
(2001)
Our Bodies, Our Babies: The Forgotten Women's Movement
, pp. 62-83
-
-
Reiger, K.M.1
-
57
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20444415019
-
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According to the Centers for Disease Control, "One in every four or five pregnant women carries GBS [Group B Streptococcus] in the rectum or vagina. A fetus may come in contact with GBS before or during birth." Because GBS "is the most common cause of sepsis... and meningitis... in newborns," the CDC recommends that women who test positive for GBS late in pregnancy be offered prophylactic antibiotics "at the time of labor or membrane rupture." Centers for Disease Control, "Group B Streptococcal Disease (GBS). Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases," http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dbmd/diseaseinfo/groupbstrep_g.htm. (Accessed 24 December 2002.) However, there are risks involved in using prophylactic antibiotics in the large population of women who test positive for GBS but are not symptomatic at the time of delivery; and "have a relatively low risk of delivering an infant with GBS disease." Midwife Archives, Gentlebirth.org, "Group B Strep (GBS)," http://www.gentlebirth.org/archives/gbs.html. (Accessed 31 August 2003.) For a discussion of the widespread of antibiotics and risk of fungal infection in nursing infants
-
-
-
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58
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20444428829
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"Yeast Infections of the Nipples and Breasts"
-
see. (Accessed 1 September 2003.)
-
see Kathleen L. Hoover, "Yeast Infections of the Nipples and Breasts," http://www.medela.com/NewFiles/thrush.html. (Accessed 1 September 2003.)
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-
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Hoover, K.L.1
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59
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20444403150
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"The Technocratic Body" provides an especially provocative analysis along these lines
-
Davis-Floyd's "The Technocratic Body" provides an especially provocative analysis along these lines.
-
-
-
Davis-Floyd's1
-
60
-
-
20444387010
-
"What (and Why)," demonstrate how difficult raising these questions can be, let alone finding answers to them
-
DeVries et al., "What (and Why)," demonstrate how difficult raising these questions can be, let alone finding answers to them.
-
-
-
DeVries1
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61
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8744245026
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-
See, for example New York: New York University Press 2000 1-32 for an example of a physician-authored monograph that attempts this kind of multi-layered analysis
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See, for example, Thomas H. Strong, Jr., M.D., Expecting Trouble: The Myth of Prenatal Care in America (New York: New York University Press, 2000), 1-32, for an example of a physician-authored monograph that attempts this kind of multi-layered analysis.
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Expecting Trouble: The Myth of Prenatal Care in America
-
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Strong Jr., T.H.1
|