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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper discussing the medicalization of normal physiological processes, using in vitro fertilization and childbirth as examples. Some very natural physiological characteristics of women of reproductive age more often than not are treated as medical conditions requiring medical attention. The purpose here is to review the advantages and disadvantages of regarding normal life processes as medical events. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSmedWomPhsy.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of rising health care costs and an international shortage of nurses, the medical profession has devised a revolutionary approach to childbirth: low-risk women sometimes have their babies at home,
rather than in a hospital. For thousands of years, women gave birth without the assistance of technology, but we have now come full circle. Giving birth without the
benefits of technology and the proximity of extensively-trained medical professionals now is seen as an innovation in childbirth (Johnson and Daviss, 2005). Women taking maternity leave often are put
on "disability" pay for the duration of that leave. In essence, some very natural physiological characteristics of women of reproductive age more often
than not are treated as medical conditions requiring medical attention. The purpose here is to review the advantages and disadvantages of regarding normal life processes - specifically fertility and
childbirth - as medical events. Fertility Three-fifths of developing countries report their fertility rates are too high; three-fifths of developed nations report that
their fertility rates are too low (United Nations, 2004). Many women in developed nations have sought to place their reproductive activities on hold as they pursue careers or simply
wait until later ages to marry and begin to think about having children. For many, by the time they have achieved what they want for themselves in terms of
career goals, the "biological clock" has moved past their optimum reproductive age range. Thus forty-year-old women seek in vain to become pregnant, after spending twenty years devoting much energy
and attention to avoiding becoming pregnant. It is understandable why women in this age group would have difficulty conceiving. They likely are
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