• Zamawiaj do paczkomatu
  • Płać wygodnie
  • Obniżka

Midwifery: Best Practice, Volume 4

9780750688956
187,00 zł
168,00 zł Zniżka 19,00 zł Brutto
Najniższa cena w okresie 30 dni przed promocją: 168,00 zł
Ilość
Produkt niedostępny
Nakład wyczerpany (niedostępny u wydawcy)

  Dostawa

Wybierz Paczkomat Inpost, Orlen Paczkę, DPD lub Pocztę Polską. Kliknij po więcej szczegółów

  Płatność

Zapłać szybkim przelewem, kartą płatniczą lub za pobraniem. Kliknij po więcej szczegółów

  Zwroty

Jeżeli jesteś konsumentem możesz zwrócić towar w ciągu 14 dni. Kliknij po więcej szczegółów

Opis
This is Volume 4 in the Midwifery:: best practice series. Each of the volumes in this Series is built around the familiar core of four main topic areas relevant to midwifery (pregnancy, labour / birth, postnatal and stories / reflection) but also includes a number of focus on. sections. These are different in each volume and reflect a wide range of key and topical issues within midwifery. Each volume builds upon the others to provide a comprehensive library of articles that shows the development of thought in key midwifery areas. Volume 4 offers a range of wholly new topic areas within the focus on. sections, including communities of women, birth centres and exploring diversity.
Szczegóły produktu
33936
9780750688956
9780750688956

Opis

Rok wydania
2006
Numer wydania
1
Oprawa
miękka foliowana
Liczba stron
280
Wymiary (mm)
280 x 216
Waga (g)
885
  • Introduction

    Acknowledgements

    SECTION 1 Women and Midwives
    1.1 The impact of the establishment of a midwife managed unit on women in a rural setting in England
    Kim Watts, Diane M Fraser and Fehmidah Munir
    1.2 Culture, Control and the Birth Environment
    Mary Newburn
    1.3 Drawing the Line:: caesarean sections on demand
    Natasha Carr
    1.4 Searching for autonomy
    Katherine Pollard
    1.5 The risky business of normal birth
    Jenny Fraser
    SECTION 2 Focus on . Diversity (1)
    2.1 Building bridges:: involving Pakistani women
    Yana Richens
    2.2 Whats it like to work in Siberia?
    Rachel Simpkins
    2.3 Whats it like to work in Ontario?
    Elizabeth Fulton-Breathat
    2.4 Excerpts from a CNMs journal:: Kosovo, winter 2000
    Barbara Hammes
    2.5 Midwifery in Northern Belize
    Diane B Boyer, Carrie Klima, Judith Jennrich and Jeanne E. Raisler
    SECTION 3 Pregnancy. Exploring Pregnancy .
    3.1 Risk and risk assessment in pregnancy - do we scare because we care?
    Katja Stahl and Vanora Hundley
    3.2 Reduced frequency prenatal visits in midwifery practice:: attitudes and use
    Deborah S Walker, Stephanie Day, Corinne Diroff, Heather Lirette, Laura McCully, Candace Mooney-Hescott and Victoria Vest
    3.3 Australian womens stories of their baby-feeding decisions in pregnancy
    Athena Sheehan, Virginia Schmied and Margaret Cooke
    3.4 The Big Pregnancy Brain Mush Myth
    Sara Wickham
    3.5 Body image and pregnancy
    Lorna Davies
    SECTION 4 Focus On . Building Communities of Women
    4.1 Being used? Motive for user involvement
    Beverley A. Lawrence Beech
    4.2 Powerful Sharing? Creating Effective User Groups
    Julie Wray
    4.3 An evaluation of a support group for breast-feeding women in Salisbury, UK
    Jo Alexander, Tricia Anderson, Mandy grant, Jill Sanghera and Dawn Jackson
    4.4 The Birth Resource Centre:: A Community of Women
    Jane Crewe, Andrea St. Clair, Lyssa Clayton, Fiona Armstrong, Lee Seekings-Norman, Nadine Edwards and Sara Wickham
    SECTION 5 Labour and Birth
    5.1 Current best evidence:: A review of the literature on umbilical cord clamping
    Judith S. Mercer
    5.2 Perineal trauma:: prevention and treatment
    Rona McCandlish
    5.3 A disappearing art:: vaginal breech birth
    Becky Reed
    5.4 Home Breech Birth
    Esther Culpin (Commentary by Michel Odent)
    5.5 To drip or not to drip? A literature review
    Myra Parsons
    5.6 Fetal blood sampling
    Penny Champion
    5.7 Dont take it lying down!
    Gillian Fletcher
    5.8 Going Backwards:: the concept of pasmo
    Ina May Gaskin
    SECTION 6 Focus On . Birth Centres
    6.1 A cycle of empowerment:: the enabling culture of birth centres
    Mavis Kirkham
    6.2 Home from home:: the key to success
    Morwenna Davies, Shirley McDonald and Denise Austin
    6.3 A compromise for change?
    Sara Wickham
    6.4 Birth Centres in Wiltshire (1)
    Vicky Tinsley
    6.5 Birth Centres in Wiltshire (2)
    Vicky Tinsley
    SECTION 7 Life After Birth
    7.1 Postnatal Care:: is it an afterthought?
    Julie Wray
    7.2 A light in the fog:: Caring for women with postpartum depression
    Holly Powell Kennedy, Cheryl Tatano Beck and Jeanne Watson Driscoll
    7.3 Hands Off! The Breastfeeding Best Start Project (1)
    Sally Inch, Susan Law and Louise Wallace
    7.4 Hands Off! The Breastfeeding Best Start Project (2)
    Sally Inch, Susan Law and Louise Wallace
    7.5 White blood:: dose benefits of human milk
    Suzanne Colson
    7.6 Mother and Baby - a Good Start
    Sarah J. Buckley
    SECTION 8 Focus on . Diversity (2)
    8.1 Adolescent motherhood in an inner city who are in the UK:: Experiences and needs of a group of adolescent mothers
    Maria Barrell
    8.2 Why choose motherhood? The older teenage clients perspective
    Claire Beckinsale
    8.3 Beating disability, embracing motherhood
    Simone Baker
    Pregnancy, labour and mothering among women who have suffered trauma
    Mindy Levy
    SECTION 9 Stories and Reflection
    9.1 Creating a scene:: the work of Progress Theatre
    Kirsten Baker
    9.2 The Numbers Game
    Nicki Pusey
    9.3 Kicking out the oboes
    Suzanne Colson
    9.4 You can take a horse to water.
    Anon
    9.5 Pushing the boundaries:: independence in the NHS
    Lynn Walcott
    9.6 Pushed to the limit
    Rosie Kacary
    9.7 My birth story
    Andrea Wolahan with Virginia Howes
    9.8 A wise birth revisited
    Penny Armstrong
    9.9 Compare and contrast. three births in one day
    Anne Adamson
    9.10 The Un-Peel Report
    Gill Walton
    9.11 Goodbye, and thanks
    Jane Bowler

    Index
Komentarze (0)