Sustainability, Midwifery and Birth
Herausgeber: Davies, Lorna; Kensington, Mary; Daellenbach, Rea
Sustainability, Midwifery and Birth
Herausgeber: Davies, Lorna; Kensington, Mary; Daellenbach, Rea
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This new edition outlines how sustainability can be incorporated into midwifery practice, education and research. It has been thoroughly revised to include new models of sustainable midwifery practice and new chapters on rural midwives and rural communities, social justice, and compassion.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Cheryl Tatano BeckTraumatic Childbirth231,99 €
- Supporting Women to Give Birth at Home210,99 €
- Techniques of Hearing168,99 €
- Sam Chenery-MorrisNormal Midwifery Practice170,99 €
- Guang-Zhen WangReproductive Health and Gender Equality179,99 €
- William Fetherston Haugh MontgomeryAn Exposition of the Signs and Symptoms of Pregnancy: With Some Other Papers On Subjects Connected With Midwifery43,99 €
- Emma ArmstrongThe Fearless Birth Book (the Naked Doula)21,99 €
-
-
-
This new edition outlines how sustainability can be incorporated into midwifery practice, education and research. It has been thoroughly revised to include new models of sustainable midwifery practice and new chapters on rural midwives and rural communities, social justice, and compassion.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- 2nd edition
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 576g
- ISBN-13: 9780367259242
- ISBN-10: 0367259249
- Artikelnr.: 59985122
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- 2nd edition
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 160mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 576g
- ISBN-13: 9780367259242
- ISBN-10: 0367259249
- Artikelnr.: 59985122
Lorna Davies is Academic Manager, Department of Healthcare Practice at Ara Institute of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. Rea Daellenbach is a Senior Lecturer in the Bachelor of Midwifery programme at Ara Institute of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. Mary Kensington is a Principal Lecturer and Head of the School of Midwifery at Ara Institute of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand.
Section One: The Politics of midwifery and Sustainability 1.Globalisation,
midwifery and maternity services: struggles in meaning and practice in
states under pressure. 2.Costing birth as commodity or sustainable public
good. 3.Social justice, motherhood, and Midwives. 4.Valuing the labour of
Midwives in Ontario, Canada and New Zealand. Section Two: Midwifery as a
Sustainable Healthcare Practice 5.The Midwife as Social Connector. 6.
Sustained by joy: The potential of flow experience for midwives and mothers
and the blocking of that flow. 7.Sustained by compassion. 8.Career or life
cycle: The phenomenon of transitioning work-setting within Midwifery in
order to remain personally and professionally sustainable. 9.Sustaining
rural midwives and rural communities. 10.Good housekeeping in sustainable
midwifery practice. 11.A values-based approach to sustainability literacy
in a bachelor of midwifery programme. Section Three: Supporting a
sustainable approach to parenting 12.The pregnant environment 13.The
birthing environment: a sustainable approach 14.Antenatal education:
sustaining healthy families 15.Climate action and infant feeding 16.'Good
mothers' in the age of finance.
midwifery and maternity services: struggles in meaning and practice in
states under pressure. 2.Costing birth as commodity or sustainable public
good. 3.Social justice, motherhood, and Midwives. 4.Valuing the labour of
Midwives in Ontario, Canada and New Zealand. Section Two: Midwifery as a
Sustainable Healthcare Practice 5.The Midwife as Social Connector. 6.
Sustained by joy: The potential of flow experience for midwives and mothers
and the blocking of that flow. 7.Sustained by compassion. 8.Career or life
cycle: The phenomenon of transitioning work-setting within Midwifery in
order to remain personally and professionally sustainable. 9.Sustaining
rural midwives and rural communities. 10.Good housekeeping in sustainable
midwifery practice. 11.A values-based approach to sustainability literacy
in a bachelor of midwifery programme. Section Three: Supporting a
sustainable approach to parenting 12.The pregnant environment 13.The
birthing environment: a sustainable approach 14.Antenatal education:
sustaining healthy families 15.Climate action and infant feeding 16.'Good
mothers' in the age of finance.
Section One: The Politics of midwifery and Sustainability 1.Globalisation,
midwifery and maternity services: struggles in meaning and practice in
states under pressure. 2.Costing birth as commodity or sustainable public
good. 3.Social justice, motherhood, and Midwives. 4.Valuing the labour of
Midwives in Ontario, Canada and New Zealand. Section Two: Midwifery as a
Sustainable Healthcare Practice 5.The Midwife as Social Connector. 6.
Sustained by joy: The potential of flow experience for midwives and mothers
and the blocking of that flow. 7.Sustained by compassion. 8.Career or life
cycle: The phenomenon of transitioning work-setting within Midwifery in
order to remain personally and professionally sustainable. 9.Sustaining
rural midwives and rural communities. 10.Good housekeeping in sustainable
midwifery practice. 11.A values-based approach to sustainability literacy
in a bachelor of midwifery programme. Section Three: Supporting a
sustainable approach to parenting 12.The pregnant environment 13.The
birthing environment: a sustainable approach 14.Antenatal education:
sustaining healthy families 15.Climate action and infant feeding 16.'Good
mothers' in the age of finance.
midwifery and maternity services: struggles in meaning and practice in
states under pressure. 2.Costing birth as commodity or sustainable public
good. 3.Social justice, motherhood, and Midwives. 4.Valuing the labour of
Midwives in Ontario, Canada and New Zealand. Section Two: Midwifery as a
Sustainable Healthcare Practice 5.The Midwife as Social Connector. 6.
Sustained by joy: The potential of flow experience for midwives and mothers
and the blocking of that flow. 7.Sustained by compassion. 8.Career or life
cycle: The phenomenon of transitioning work-setting within Midwifery in
order to remain personally and professionally sustainable. 9.Sustaining
rural midwives and rural communities. 10.Good housekeeping in sustainable
midwifery practice. 11.A values-based approach to sustainability literacy
in a bachelor of midwifery programme. Section Three: Supporting a
sustainable approach to parenting 12.The pregnant environment 13.The
birthing environment: a sustainable approach 14.Antenatal education:
sustaining healthy families 15.Climate action and infant feeding 16.'Good
mothers' in the age of finance.