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Culture, Religion & Childbearing: A Handbook for Health Professionals

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This book will enable health care professionals, particularly midwives, to understand the spectrum of cultural and religious issues that affect the quality of care that they can give to women and their families during child bearing. They are encouraged to reflect on their own attitudes and assumptions and are offered ways of improving their communication skills in this very sensitive area. Research based, the book also draws on interviews conducted specifically for this publication.

In a plural society, everyone involved in providing, planning and managing women's health services requires special skills to meet individual cultural and religious needs. This unique and sensitive book presents down-to-earth, practical and constructive ways of enhancing practice in all areas of women's health care.

384 pages, Paperback

First published February 22, 1996

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Profile Image for Charlotte.
13 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2013
an oldy but goody. i think it could make professionals overly sensitive about culture, which can evoke misunderstanding and ignoring factors related to 'culture' or religion that could actually become child protection issues. the problem really is that the book is based around the notion that 'culture' and 'religion' are bounded in some way. it is a good book to learn from but must be questioned. i think the inclusion of quotes does make the book effective.
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