244 Pages
    by Routledge

    244 Pages 28 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The first book to present the history, ideas, life and works of Chinese midwives and birth attendants, this volume seeks to encapsulate and explain the changing ideas about the practice of midwifery in China.





    Using participant observations and interviews, it examines each phase of the development of midwifery in depth. Providing a systematic study of the existing literature and contemporary national health policies, it analyses the factors contributing to the current demise of midwifery in China, such as the absence of national regulation, high standards of education and national midwives’ associations. Furthermore, it argues that China’s national statistics in the past six decades demonstrate clear evidence that minimising maternal mortality rates will only happen through wider availability of services, rather than through obstetric technology or facility based care. Ultimately, therefore this book supports the view that humanity and midwifery will survive to overcome domination by both technology and market forces and that economic growth and medical technology alone will not be sufficient in providing effective healthcare.



    This book is an indispensable resource for the study of Chinese midwifery, both in theory and in practice. As such it will be useful to students and scholars of Midwifery, Women’s Health, Sociology and culture and society in China.

    1. Introduction Part I History and Development 2. Research Considerations 3. A Holistic approach Chinese Midwifery Before 1928 4. Chinese Midwifery in the Twentieth Century: Highs and lows 5. Recent Midwifery Developments Part II Current State and Issues 6. Midwifery and its Professionalisation 7. Modernising Childbirth in China (1928-2017 CE) 8. The Marginalisation of Chinese Midwives Part III Prospects for Midwives and Midwifery 9. Chinese Midwives’ Life and Work Since 770 BCE 10. Modern Midwives’ Stories (1929-2017 CE) 11. Does China Need Midwifery? 12. Epilogue: What Do Women Want?

    Biography

    Ngai Fen Cheung is an independent midwifery researcher. She is also the honorary permanent expert at the Shijiazhuang Obstetric and Gynaecology Hospital, China and adviser to the Chinese Midwifery Expert Committee, Chinese Maternal and Child Health Association.





    Rosemary Mander is Emeritus Professor of Midwifery at the University of Edinburgh, UK. She has practised as a midwife in the UK, both independently and in the NHS.