Black middle-class women and pregnancy loss : a qualitative inquiry black / Lisa Paisley-Cleveland.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780739175194
- 073917519X
- 0739175181
- 9780739175187
- 0739185195
- 9780739185193
- 9781299757097
- 129975709X
- Miscarriage -- United States
- African American women -- Health and hygiene
- Middle class women -- Health and hygiene -- United States
- African Americans
- Prenatal care
- African Americans
- Pregnancy Outcome -- ethnology
- Infant Mortality -- ethnology
- Health Status Disparities
- Social Class
- Prenatal Care
- United States
- Avortement spontané -- États-Unis
- Noires américaines -- Santé et hygiène
- Femmes de la classe moyenne -- Santé et hygiène -- États-Unis
- Noirs américains
- Soins prénatals
- African American
- MEDICAL -- Gynecology & Obstetrics
- African American women -- Health and hygiene
- Miscarriage
- United States
- 618.3/9208996073 23
- RG648 .P35 2013eb
- WQ 200 AA1
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Early stages explored: Life before and during pregancy -- Issues and outcomes of prenatal care: It is complicated -- Women's experience with stress: Dangerous burdens -- Fathers and pregnancy involvement: A role of a lifetime -- Precipitating causes: Breaking point -- Reflections on loss, healing, and resiliency: Labor of loss and sorrow -- Making sense of it all: Expanded obervations -- Lessons learned.
Black Middle-Class Women and Pregnancy Loss: A Qualitative Inquiry is the first qualitative research case study of its kind focused on Black American born middle-class professional married women who have all lived through infant loss. This study examines the Infant Mortality disparity (blacks 12.40, whites 5.35) outside the poverty paradigm, with probable implications for minority groups in England and Wales, (having a similar racial history to the U.S) with Caribbean and Pakistani IM rates being more than twice that of white British.
English.
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