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From ‘culture of dehumanization of childbirth’ to ‘childbirth as a transformative experience’: changes in five municipalities in north‐east Brazil
Author(s) -
Misago C,
Kendall C,
Freitas P,
Haneda K,
Silveira D,
Onuki D,
Mori T,
Sadamori T,
Umenai T
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
international journal of gynecology and obstetrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.895
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1879-3479
pISSN - 0020-7292
DOI - 10.1016/s0020-7292(01)00511-2
Subject(s) - childbirth , dehumanization , medicine , transformative learning , agency (philosophy) , medicalization , government (linguistics) , nursing , sociology , pregnancy , psychiatry , social science , linguistics , genetics , philosophy , biology , pedagogy , anthropology
Brazil has become a country known as having one of the most extreme examples of the consequences of the hospital‐based medicalization of delivery care, while a model of humanization of birth was developed in the State of Ceará in the 1970s. The Government of Japan, through the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA), collaborated with the Federal Ministry of Health of Brazil and the Government of the State of Ceará, in implementing the Maternal and Child Health Improvement Project in north‐east Brazil (1996–2001). This project focused on ‘humanization of childbirth’, with training based intervention activities. Behavioral changes among health professionals who received the project's participatory type of training were described using rapid anthropological assessment procedure (RAP) survey results. Changes from ‘a culture of dehumanization of childbirth’ to ‘childbirth as a transformative experience’ were observed.

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