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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page report discusses one of the oldest health care professions -- that of being a midwife. Midwives specialize in women giving birth. In countless circumstances, midwives are able to provide the specialized and personal services that the typical gynecologist-obstetrician M.D. could only provide if she or he had a truly limited medical practice. More often than not, the average midwife provides the average pregnant woman with the services she most wants and needs -- competence and personal interaction and understanding. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWmidwif.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
it has become one of the most contemporary of professions. A healthy pregnant woman who has no reason to fear that her pregnancy will be anything less than a textbook
example of human gestation and birth, is more than likely to discover that being under the care of a midwife rather than a physician is likely to be a remarkably
satisfactory. Midwives specialize in women giving birth. In countless circumstances, midwives are able to provide the specialized and personal services that the typical gynecologist-obstetrician M.D. could only provide if she
or he had a truly limited medical practice. More often than not, the average midwife provides the average pregnant woman with the services she most wants and needs -- competence
and personal interaction and understanding. Quality of Midwifery Services In what is most commonly referred to as the "developed" world, midwifery is most often viewed with either a certain
measure of skepticism in the sense that it is an "old-world custom" that is now best suited to the "alternative" community or to those who cannot afford the more expensive
services of an actual physician. It is important to understand that nothing could be a greater distortion of the truth. Modern midwives most often have a great deal of training
and, in most mainstream settings, are also nurses or nurse-midwife practitioners. Many are in practice with a physician or physicians and many form partnerships with other midwives. According to
Stewart (1998), the proportion of women in the United States who use a nurse-midwife instead of an obstetrician to give birth is increasing. However, Stewart also explains that: "Midwives disproportionately
serve women who are at an increased risk of poor birth outcomes for social rather than medical reasons--i.e., in terms of their age, education, ethnicity, marital status, inner-city and rural
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