- Office of The Vice-Chancellor - Research Publications
Office of The Vice-Chancellor - Research Publications
Permanent URI for this collection
3 results
Filters
Reset filtersSettings
Statistics
Citations
Search Results
Now showing
1 - 3 of 3
-
ItemA Line in the Sand 50 Years On: Commonwealth Involvement in Indigenous AffairsAlthaus, C ; Patterson, M (WILEY, 2017-12)
-
Item
-
ItemFear, Risk, and the Responsible Choice: Risk Narratives and Lowering the Rate of Caesarean Sections in High-income CountriesHallgrimsdottir, H ; Shumka, L ; Althaus, C ; Benoit, C (AMER INST MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES-AIMS, 2017)In Canada, as elsewhere in the world, caesarean sections are the most common surgical procedure performed in hospitals annually. Recent national statistics indicate 28% of infants in Canada are born by c-section while in the United States that number rises to 33%. This is despite World Health Organization recommendations that at a population level only 10-15% of births warrant this form of medical intervention. This trend has become cause for concern in recent decades due to the short and long-term health risks to pregnant women and infants, as well as the financial burden it places on public health care systems. Others warn this trend may result in a collective loss of cultural knowledge of a normal physiological process and, in the process, establish a new "normal" childbirth. Despite a range of interventions to curb c-section rates-enhanced prenatal care and innovation in pregnancy monitoring, change in hospital level policies, procedures and protocols, as well as public education campaigns-they remain stubbornly resistant to stabilization, let alone, reduction in high-income countries. We explore-through a review of the academic and grey literature-the role of cultural and social narratives around risk, and the responsibilization of the pregnant woman and the medical practitioner in creating this kind of resistance to intervention today.