Sadness and joy: giving birth in Zimbabwe

Title
Sadness and joy: giving birth in Zimbabwe
Publication Date
2006
Author(s)
Stanley, David
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7767-5442
Email: dstanle5@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:dstanle5
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Ten Alps Publishing
Place of publication
United Kingdom
UNE publication id
une:22324
Abstract
With the problems of limited birth options and a lack of job satisfaction within the midwifery profession in the UK, it is easy to lose sight of the hardships faced by pregnant women in other countries. Following time he spent working in rural Zimbabwe, David Stanley tells the stories of three women who gave birth in conditions of extreme poverty and suffering. Not all women are able to deliver in the relative safety and comfort of NHS hospitals or have the security of professional midwifery care in their own homes. The following are three stories based on my experience of working for over two years as a midwife and midwifery tutor in a rural mission hospital in central Zimbabwe. Women in Zimbabwe have the option of giving birth is neither a hospital, rural clinic or with a traditional birth attendant (Ambuya). All names have been changed to protect the women's anonymity.
Link
Citation
RCM Midwives, 9(2), p. 54-58
ISSN
1479-2915
Start page
54
End page
58

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