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Through the ages women have had midwives to help at their birth. This book is about an ethnographic narrative study conducted in Iceland, exploring midwives storytelling about their knowledge experience and working life in the period from the mid twentieth century to the present time. During interviews with twenty six midwives birth stories were collected. The findings describe the core narrative which surrounds the act of being with woman" during birth, considered to be fundamental in making connections with women and the birth itself to learn different ways of knowing, including the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Through the ages women have had midwives to help at their birth. This book is about an ethnographic narrative study conducted in Iceland, exploring midwives storytelling about their knowledge experience and working life in the period from the mid twentieth century to the present time. During interviews with twenty six midwives birth stories were collected. The findings describe the core narrative which surrounds the act of being with woman" during birth, considered to be fundamental in making connections with women and the birth itself to learn different ways of knowing, including the intuitive, spiritual and theoretical. Icelandic midwives have a common philosophy of care that is associated with a midwifery partnership model of care, incorporated in the ideological statements of the Icelandic midwifery education. Yet, as in other countries, modern maternity care in centralized hospitals pushes midwives toward industrial and medical models of care. This can have detrimental effects on the many facets of midwifery relationships with women and midwives ways of knowing. The danger is that midwifery knowledge and skills will be lost to promote normality and safety of birth.
Autorenporträt
Ólöf Ásta Ólafsdóttir, got her PhD degree from Thames Valley University in London in 2006. Since 1996 she has been the leader of midwifery studies at the Department of Midwifery, University of Iceland, chairing research and developments in midwifery, at the Women and Child Clinic at the Landpitali, University Hospital in Reykjavik.