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Coming Home: How Midwives Changed Birth

Autor Wendy Kline
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 ian 2021
By the mid-twentieth century, two things appeared destined for extinction in the United States: the practice of home birth and the profession of midwifery. In 1940, close to half of all U.S. births took place in the hospital, and the trend was increasing. By 1970, the percentage of hospital births reached an all-time high of 99.4%, and the obstetrician, rather than the midwife, assumed nearly complete control over what had become an entirely medicalized procedure. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, an explosion of new alternative organizations, publications, and conferences cropped up, documenting a very different demographic trend; by 1977, the percentage of out-of-hospital births had more than doubled. Home birth was making a comeback, but why? The executive director of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists publicly noted in 1977 the "rising tide of demand for home delivery," describing it as an "anti-intellectual-anti-science revolt." A quiet revolution spread across cities and suburbs, towns and farms, as individuals challenged legal, institutional and medical protocols by choosing unlicensed midwives to catch their babies at home. Coming Home analyzes the ideas, values, and experiences that led to this quiet revolution and its long-term consequences for our understanding of birth, medicine, and culture. Who were these self-proclaimed midwives and how did they learn their trade? Because the United States had virtually eliminated midwifery in most areas by the mid-twentieth century, most of them had little knowledge of or exposure to the historic practice, drawing primarily on obstetrical texts, trial and error, and sometimes instruction from aging home birth physicians to learn their craft. While their constituents were primarily drawn from the educated white middle class, their model of care (which ultimately drew on the wisdom and practice of a more diverse, global pool of midwives) had the potential to transform birth practices for all women, both in and out of the hospital.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197563380
ISBN-10: 0197563384
Pagini: 260
Ilustrații: 25 hts
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

In Coming Home: How Midwives Changed Birth, Wendy Kline offers an engaging read about an important chapter in the feminist health movement and the history of childbirth...Coming Home is a good read and a welcome addition to the growing literature on the American feminist health movement and the history of childbirth.
Kline has written an engaging history of how midwives accomplished this feat in light of the reach and power of institutionalized medicine. Anyone interested in learning where and how babies were born will want to read this book...Kline's book will undoubtedly convince readers that midwives should be at the center of delivering these better outcomes.
this book could (and probably should) lead to a reconsideration of a medical practice that has altered the beginning of life in this world ... a book that is worth the effort. It should be on permanent display in multiple places
The publication of Wendy Kline's book is welcome, as it makes a significant contribution to our understanding of how midwifery has developed. Its major strength to me as a midwife is that it takes me back to my roots, reminding me of the fundamentals of the meaning of midwifery
In her engaging and well-researched book ... Kline presents a new and necessary chapter in the story of the medicalization of childbirth in the United States: the history of the home birth movement. Kline has a keen eye for entertaining anecdotes and knows exactly when to sprinkle in intriguing biographical details ... We get a real sense of who these midwives were, how they fit within a broader home birth movement, and how, between the 1970s and the present, their practices and Americans' reception of them evolved. More than a history of the home birth movement, Coming Home updates the history of American childbirth and complicates a number of big ideas in the history of modern medicine, making it a terrific addition to the field of women's health ... A new starting point for the history of childbirth.
The real critical strength of Coming Home is the author's ability to read beyond midwives' professional gains, examining their influence on traditional medicine, spiritual movements, psychiatry, civil rights, and the public imagination.
This is a magnificent and nuanced history of home birth and midwifery over the past half century. Kline not only depicts with great care and precision just how resistance to unnecessarily medicalized birth developed in communities across the United States, she traces the development of a complex social movement that continues to have an impact on public policies that affect birthing experiences in all settings. The personal narratives of so many extraordinary midwives will certainly inspire generations of younger people who will be following in their footsteps.
Wendy Kline provides a valuable and much-needed contribution to the social and medical history of childbirth in America. The vivid and moving stories of midwives and home births leap off the pages as Kline takes us from Chicago to California to Washington, DC, Tennessee, Texas, and Seattle. She compellingly analyzes and explains why some women came to prefer midwife-attended home births over physician-attended hospital deliveries. This well-written book about twentieth century women's home-delivery experiences is exceptionally readable and historically meaningful and important.
In Coming Home, Wendy Kline weaves a series of individual stories into a compelling narrative of the home birth movement in the United States in the past century and places into context a long neglected chapter of American medical history.
The profession of midwifery was deliberately and systematically obliterated by jealous physicians at the turn of the twentieth century. Kline's dogged research chronicles the rebirth of our hallowed profession in the 1970-80s.
Kline offers a rich and complicated history of direct entry midwifery and the twentieth-century American homebirth movement ... At the core of Kline's thesis is that in each locale where women were called into midwifery, they collaborated with physicians. These women saw childbirth as requiring much more than medical technology, yet they recognized it had its place, and thus sought out or welcomed unsolicited supportive medical advisers and teachers.

Notă biografică

Wendy Kline is Dema G. Seelye Chair in the History of Medicine in the Department of History at Purdue University. She is the author of Building a Better Race: Gender, Sexuality, and Eugenics from the Turn of the Century to the Baby Boom and Bodies of Knowledge: Sexuality, Reproduction, and Women's Health in the Second Wave.