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Brought to Bed : Childbearing in America, 1750-1950, 30th Anniversary Edition

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Based on personal accounts by birthing women and their medical attendants, Brought to Bed reveals how childbirth has changed from colonial times to the present. Judith Walzer Leavitt's study focuses on the traditional woman-centered home-birthing practices, their replacement by male doctors, and the movement from the home to the hospital.

She explains that childbearing women and their physicians gradually changed birth places because they believed the increased medicalization would make giving birth safer and more comfortable.

Ironically, because of infection, infant and maternal mortality did not immediately decline.

She concludes that birthing women held considerable power in determining labor and delivery events as long as childbirth remained in the home.

The move to the hospital in the twentieth century gave the medical profession the upper hand.

Leavitt also discusses recent events in American obstetrics that illustrate how women have attempted to retrieve some of the traditional women--and family--centered aspects of childbirth. This 30th anniversary edition includes a new preface that discusses the writing of the history of childbirth over the past three decades.

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£29.99
Product Details
Oxford University Press Inc
0190264128 / 9780190264123
Paperback / softback
26/01/2017
United States
English
312 pages : illustrations (black and white)
22 cm
Reprint. Previously issued in print: 1986 Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.