A call for critical midwifery studies: Confronting systemic injustice in sexual, reproductive, maternal, and newborn care
Date
2022Author
Ashley, Rebecca
Goodarzi, Bahareh
Horn, Anna
de Klerk, Hannah
E. Ku, Susana
Marcus, Jason K.
Mayra, Kaveri
Mohamied, Fatimah
Nayiga, Harriet
Sharma, Priya
Udho, Samson
Vijber, Madyasa Ruby
van der Waal, Rodante
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Show full item recordAbstract
ystemic injustice is a threat to sexual, reproductive, ma-
ternal, and newborn (SRMN) health. The effects of this
injustice are reflected in the high maternal and neonatal
morbidity and mortality rates in former colonized coun-
tries of the Global South, in marginalized communities of
the Global North, and in underprivileged classes around
the world. 1 Current research, clinical guidance, and global
health politics all point to an inadequate response to in-
justice on the part of SRMN care systems. Consider, for instance, four examples of ongoing injustices globally: the
lack of workforce to meet SRMN, 2 the lack of access to
safe abortion, 3 the “ethnic”, “racial”, and socioeconomic
disparities present in maternal and newborn outcomes
during the Covid-19 pandemic,4,5 and the severity and
persistence of obstetric violence and obstetric racism.
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