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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page research paper that discusses the birthing center at Miami Valley Hospital. Today, hospitals are finding that to remain viable from a fiscal perspective, they must increasing compete with specialty facilities. The following examination looks at this financial trend in regards to specialty facilities that offer options regarding childbirth. The alternative birthing movement has provided a challenge to hospitals in regards to the sort of setting that women today desire for their delivery experiences. After discussing this trend, this examination discusses the issues involved in regards to a specific institution, Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton, Ohio, a level one trauma center that serves 17 counties. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khmvhbir.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
financial trend in regards to specialty facilities that offer options regarding childbirth. The alternative birthing movement has provided a challenge to hospitals in regards to the sort of setting
that women today desire for their delivery experiences. After discussing this trend, this examination discusses the issues involved in regards to a specific institution, Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton, Ohio,
a level one trauma center that serves 17 counties. While home birth and midwifery were commonplace in the U.S. in earlier generations, by the 1970s, hospital births had become
the norm (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005). Birth moved from being regarded as natural process attended by female midwives to being a medicalized one that fell under the jurisdiction of a
male physician (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005). This situation has changed radically in recent years, as consumers have demanded alternative facilities in regards to birth options (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005). This
expansion of midwifery services has led to increased autonomy and practice within many countries, including the U.S. Beginning in the early 1970s, proponents of the alternative birthing called for a
"revival of home births" and of the non-nurse midwife (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005). Birth activists have formulated a reasonable and coherent critique of medicalized management of childbirth. Their perspective
focuses on the emotional and psychological importance of treating birth as a "family event rather than a medical emergency" (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005, p. 125). These alternative birth settings also
emphasize the right of a woman to choose a birth setting, as well as those who attend her (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005). In short, many women rejected the high
tech approach to childbirth that was the norm in a hospital setting. They felt that hospitals were "inhumane and ineffective" in regards to childbirth (Beckett and Hoffman, 2005, p.
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