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The Inuulitsivik Maternities: culturally appropriate midwifery and epistemological accommodation
Author(s) -
Douglas Vasiliki K
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
nursing inquiry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.66
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1440-1800
pISSN - 1320-7881
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1800.2009.00479.x
Subject(s) - accommodation , sociology , obstetrics , psychology , medicine , neuroscience
DOUGLAS VK. Nursing Inquiry 2010; 17 : 111–117
 The Inuulitsivik Maternities: culturally appropriate midwifery and epistemological accommodation This is a literature‐based historical analysis that uses Michel Foucault’s technique of tracing epistemological change over time to understand the epistemological changes and their outcomes that have occurred in Nunavik, the Inuit region of Northern Quebec, with the introduction of modern techniques and technology of childbirth in the period after the Second World War. Beginning in 1986, in the village of Puvurnituq, a series of community birthing centres known as the Inuulitsivik Maternities have been created. They incorporate biomedical techniques and technology, but are incorporated into the Inuit epistemology of health, in which the community is the final arbitrator of medical authority. This epistemological accommodation between modern biomedicine and the distinctly premodern Inuit epistemology of health has led to the creation of a new and profoundly non‐modern approach to childbirth in Nunavik.

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