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Gender, power, structure and, culture can make women more vulnerable to obstetric violence. Figure 3 shows various aspects of these four cross‐cutting domains. For instance, women’s lack of choice is gender‐based and deep rooted in the cultural conditioning in and about women in the patriarchal post‐colonial societal structure, which sustains the ...
Kaveri Mayra+3 more
wiley +1 more source
A scoping review examining racialised women's access to midwife led birth settings found assumptions about preferred birth place being made by midwives, women and their families and differences in information given. Group antenatal care, inclusive representation, and opt‐out, flexible admission criteria may improve access and ultimately help mitigate ...
Anna Melamed+5 more
wiley +1 more source
Impolite Birth: Provider Perspectives on Vocalization During Childbirth
ABSTRACT Background Childbirth is a pivotal event marked by diverse vocalizations, yet scant research examines healthcare providers' perspectives on vocalization during birth. This study seeks to address this gap by exploring the attitudes and practices of various healthcare professionals regarding vocalization during labor and birth.
Lee Roosevelt+2 more
wiley +1 more source
Therapeutic Communication Using Mirroring Interventions in Nursing Education: A Mixed Methods Study
Summary: Purpose: Therapeutic communication between nurses and patients is a method of interaction occurring throughout the process of identifying and resolving the patient's health problems.
Seung Hee Lee, Hye Jin Yoo
doaj
ABSTRACT Introduction This article presents an assessment of the mental health profile of women who were the subject of a suicide‐related call to police or paramedics around the time of (i) pregnancy or (ii) surgical termination of pregnancy compared to (iii) other women of a similar age. Methods Findings are drawn from a population‐wide linked dataset
Carla Meurk+12 more
wiley +1 more source
Transgender identification and psychological distress: A psychoanalytic case study
This is an account of my psychoanalytic work with Jozsef, a transgender patient assigned female at birth who ended psychoanalytic treatment abruptly after 1 year. The initial 3 months were three times weekly, then four times weekly for another 9 months. Presenting problems were depression and intense feelings of loneliness.
Sheila Levi
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Background Individuals with profound and multiple learning disabilities are at the centre of debates about what it means to be a person. These debates sometimes start from the position that a person is somebody who possesses mature cognitive abilities, such as intentional communication skills and self‐reflection (which individuals with ...
Ben Simmons, Stuart Read
wiley +1 more source
The DCIDE framework: systematic investigation of evolutionary hypotheses, exemplified with autism
ABSTRACT Evolutionary explanations of mental disorders are a longstanding aim of evolutionary psychiatry, but have suffered from complexities including within‐disorder heterogeneity and environmental effects of contemporary societies obscuring possible ancestral functions.
Adam D. Hunt, Adrian V. Jaeggi
wiley +1 more source
Perceptions of nurses in Japan toward their patients' expectations of care: A qualitative study
Objectives: This study aimed to investigate ideal nurse involvement based on the expectations of patients. Data on conflicts between nurses and patients were obtained.
Mayumi Uno+2 more
doaj
Abstract This paper explores the politics and praxis of ‘youth voice assemblages’ in an exploratory and pARTicipatory research project where 125 young people (aged 11–18) from England, Scotland and Wales shared what and how they are learning about relationships, sex and sexuality.
EJ Renold+5 more
wiley +1 more source