Selected and Compiled by Jacquelyn Coughlan, M.S., M.L.S.
Abou-Saleh, M. (1997). Postpartum psychiatric illness in
Arab culture. Arab Journal of Psychiatry, 8, 1-5.
Al-Rawahi, S., & Shart-Hopko, N. (2002). The birth spacing
initiative in Oman. Journal of Cultural Diversity, 9(2),
23-26.
Barclay, L., & Kent, D. (1998). Recent immigration and the misery of motherhood: A discussion of pertinent issues. Midwifery, 14(1), 4-9.
Baumslag, N. (1987). Breast feeding: Cultural practices and variations. Advances in International Maternal and Child Health, 70, 38-39.
Berggren, V., Salam, G. A., Bergstrom, S., Johansson, E.,
& Edberg, A. (2004). An explorative study of Sudanese
midwives' motives, perceptions and experiences of re-infibulation
after birth. Midwifery, 20, 299-311.
Bodo, K., & Gibson, N. (1999). Childbirth customs in Vietnamese traditions. Canadian Family Physician, 45, 690-692.
Bowes, M. A., & Domokos, M. T. (1996). Pakastani women and maternity care: Raising muted voices. Social Health and Illness, 18, 45-65.
Bowler, I. (1993). They're not the same as us: Midwives' stereotypes of South Asian descent maternity patients. Social Health & Illness, 15, 157.
Bowler, I. (1993). Stereotypes of women of Asian descent in midwifery: Some evidence. Midwifery, 9(1), 7-16.
Burford, G. (June 2006). One birth, two words: A personal encounter with "traditional" and "modern" maternal health care in nothern Tanzania. Midwifery Today With International Midwife, 78, 56-59.
Bywaters, P., Ali, Z., Fazil, Q., Wallace, L. M., & Singh, G. (2003). Attitudes towards disability amongst Pakistani and Bangladeshi parents of disables children in the UK: Considerations for service providers and the disability movement. Health and Social Care in the Community, 11(6), 502-509.
Callister, L. C. (1995). Cultural meanings of childbirth.
Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and Neonatal Nursing,
24(3), 327-331.
Callister, L. C. (2004). Making meaning: women's birth narratives.
JOGN Nursing: Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal
Nursing, 33(4), 508-518.
Callister, L. C., Khalaf, I., Semenic, S., Kartchner, R.,
& Vehvilainen-Julkunen, K. (2003). The pain of childbirth:
Perceptions of culturally diverse women. Pain Management
Nursing, 4(4), 145-154.
Callister, L. C., Lauri, S., & Vehvilainen-Julkunen,
K. (2000). A description of birth in Finland. The American
Journal of Maternal Child Nursing, 25(3), 146-150.
Callister, L. C., Semenic, S., & Foster, J. C. (1999).
Cultural/spiritual meanings of childbirth: Orthodox Jewish
and Mormon women. Journal of Holistic Nursing, 17(3),
280-295.
Callister, L. C., & Vega, R. (1998). Giving birth: Guatemalan
women's voices. Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and
Neonatal Nursing, 27(3), 289-295.
Callister, L. C., Vehvilainen-Julkunen, K., & Lauri S.
(1996). Cultural perceptions of childbirth: A cross-cultural
comparison of childbearing women. Journal of Holistic Nursing,
1 (1), 66-78.
Callister, L. C., Vehvilainen-Julkunen, K., & Lauri,
S. (2001). Giving birth: Perceptions of Finnish childbearing
women. The American Journal of Maternal Child Nursing,
26(1), 28-32.
Cardini, F., et al. (2005). A randomised controlled trial of moxibustion for breech presentation. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 112(6), 743-747.
Cardini, F., & Weixin, H. (1998). Moxibustion for correction of breech presentation: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of the American Medical Association, 280(18), 1580-1584.
Chalmers, B., & Meyer, D. (1994). What women say about their birth experiences: A cross-cultural study. Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology, 15, 211-218.
Chalmers, B. (1996). Cross-cultural comparisons of birthing: Psycho-social issues in Western and African birth. Psychology and Health, 12(1), 11-21.
Chalmers, B., & Omer-Hashi, K. (2002). What Somali women say about giving birth in Canada. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, 20(4), 267-282.
Cheung, N. (2002). The cultural and social meanings of childbearing for Chinese and Scottish women in Scotland. Midwifery 2002, 18, 279-295.
Cheung, N. F. (1997). Chinese zuo yuezi (sitting in for the first month of the postnatal period) in Scotland. Midwifery, 13(2), 55-65.
Cioffi, J. (2004). Caring for women from culturally diverse
backgrounds: midwives' experiences. Journal of Midwifery
& Women's Health, 49(5), 437-442.
Chu, C. M. Y. (2005). Postnatal experience and health needs of Chinese migrant women in Brisbane, Australia. Ethnicity and Health, 10(1), 33-56.
Craig, D. (Autumn 2005). Women's secrets: Childbirth in rural Ethiopia. Midwifery Today & Childbirth Education, (75), 30-31.
Davis-Floyd, R. E. (1992). Birth as an American rite of passage. Berkeley: Unversity of California Press.
Dempsey, P., & Gesse, T. (1995). Beliefs, values, and practices of Navajo childbearing women. Western Journal of Nursing Research, 17, 591-604.
DePacheo, M. R., & Hutti, M. H. (1998). Cultural beliefs
and health care practices of childbearing Puerto Rican American
women and Mexican American women. Mother Baby Journal,
3(1), 14-22.
Edwards, L. E., Rautio, C., & Hakanson, E. Y. (1987).
Pregnancy among refugee women. Minnesota Medicine,
70(11), 633-637.
Essen, B., Johnsdotter, S., Hovelius, B., et al. (2000). Qualitative study of pregnancy and childbirth experiences in Somalian women resident in Sweden. British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 107, 1507-1512.
Fisher, J. A., Bowman, M., & Thomas, T. (2002). Issues
for South Asian Indian patients surrounding sexuality, fertility,
and childbirth in the U.S. health care system. Issues for
South Asian Indian Patients, 16(2), 151-155.
Fisher, J. R. W., Morrow, M. M., Nhu Ngoc, N. T., & Hoang Anh, L. T. (2004). Prevalence, nature, severity and correlates of postpartum depressive symptoms in Vietnam. The British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 111, 1353-1360.
Fok, D. (1996). Cross cultural practice and its influence on breastfeeding. Breastfeeding Review, 4(1), 13-18.
Fonte, J., & Horton-Deutsch, S. (2005). Treating postpartum depression in immigrant Muslim women. Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association, 11, 39-44.
Gagnon, A. J., Wahoush, O., Dougherty, G., Saucier, J., Dennis, C., Merry, L., Stranger, E. & Stewart, D. E (2006). The childbearing health and related service needs of newcomers (CHARSNN) study protocol. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 6(31).
Gatrad, A., & Sheikh, A. (2001). Muslim birth customs.
Archives of Disease in Childhood Fetal & Neonatal Edition,
84, 6-8.
Gatrad, A. R., Ray, M., & Sheikh, A. (2004). Hindu birth
customs. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 89, 1094-1097.
Gatrad, A. R. (1994). Attitudes and beliefs of Muslin mothers towards pregnancy and infancy. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 71(2), 170-174.
Gelfand, D. E., Balcazar, H., Parzuchowski, J., & Lenox,
S. (2004). Issues in hospice utilization by Mexicans. The
Journal of Applied Gerontology, 23(1), 3-19.
Geller, S. E., Adams, M. G., Kelly, P. J., Kodkany, B. S., & Derman, R. J. (2006). Postpartum hemorrhage in resource-poor settings. International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 92, 202-211.
Gharaibeh, M., Al-Am'aitah, R., Al Jada, N. (2005). Lifestyle
practices of Jordanian pregnant women. International Nursing
Review, 2, 92-100.
Goldbort, J. (2006). Transcultural analysis of postpartum depression. The American Journal of Maternal Child Nursing, 31(2), 121-126.
Goldsmith, J. (1990). Childbirth wisdom from the world's oldest societies. Brookline, Mass.: East West Health Books.
Hammoud, M. M., White, C. B., & Fetters, M. D. (2005). Opening cultural doors: Providing culturally sensitive healthcare to Arab Americans and American Muslim patients. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 193(4), 1307-1311.
Haque, K. N., & Gatrad, A. R. (1994). Attitudes and beliefs of Muslim mothers towards pregnancy and infancy [5]. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 71(6), 559-560.
Harrison, A. (1991). Childbirth in Kuwait: The experiences of three groups of Arab mothers. Journal of Pain & Symptom Management, 6, 466-475.
Harrison, G., Zaghloul, S., Galal, O., et al. (1993). Breastfeeding and weaning in a poor urban neighborhood in Cairo, Egypt: Maternal beliefs and perceptions. Social Science and Medicine, 36, 1063-1069.
Herrel, N., Olevitch, L., DuBois, D. K., Terry, P., Thorp, D., Kind, E., & Said, A. (2004). Somali refugee women speak out about their needs for care during pregnancy and delivery. Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health, 49(4), 345-349.
Hull, V., & Simpson, M. (eds.). (1985). Breastfeeding, child health, and child spacing: Cross-cultural prespectives. London: Croom Helm.
Hundt, G. L., Beckerleg, S., Kassem, F., Abu-Jafar, A. M.,
et al. (2000, September). Women's health custom made: Building
on the 40 days postpartum for Arab women. Health Care for
Women International, 21(6), 529-542.
Ibrahim, M. M., Persson, L. A., Omar, M. M., & Wall, S. (1992). Breast feeding and the dietary habits of children in rural Somalia. Acta Paediatrica, 81(6-7), 480-483.
Iliyasu, Z., Kabir, M., Galadanci, H. S., Abubakar, I. S., Salihu, H. M., & Aliyu, M. H. (April 2006). Postpartum beliefs and practices in Danbare village, Northern Nigeria. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 26(3), 211-215.
Ito, M., & Sharts-Hopko, N. C. (2002). Japanese women's
experience of childbirth in the United States. Health Care
for Women International, 23, 666-677.
Jordan, B. Birth in four cultures: A cross-cultural investigation of childbirth in Yucatan, Holland, Sweden, and the United States. 4th edn. Propsect Heights Illinois: Waveland Press; 1997.
Kannan, S., Carruth, B. R., & Skinner, J. (1999). Cultural influences on infant feeding beliefs of mothers. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 90(1), 88-90.
Kartchner, R., & Callister, L. (2003). Giving birth.
Voices of Chinese women. Journal of Holistic Nursing, 21(2),
100-116.
Khalaf, I., & Callister, L. C. (1997). Cultural meanings
of childbirth: Muslim women living in Jordan. Journal of
Holistic Nursing, 15(4), 373-388.
Kitzinger, S. (2000). Cultural issues: Some cultural perspectives of birth. British Journal of Midwifery, 8, 746-750.
Knodel, J., Chayovan, N., & Wongboonsin, K. (1990). Breast-feeding trends, patterns and policies in Thailand. Asia-Pacific Population Journal/ United Nations, 5(1), 135-150.
Korbin, J. (ed.). (1981). Child abuse and neglect: Cross-cultural perspectives. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Lagana, K. (2003). Come bien, camina y no se preocupe--eat right, walk, and do not worry: Selective biculturalism during pregnancy in a Mexican American community. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 14(2), 117-124.
Lang, J. B., & Elkin, E. D. (1997). A study of the beliefs
and birthing practices of traditional midwives in rural Guatemala.
Journal of Nurse-Midwifery, 42, 25-31.
Lee, R. V., D'Alauro, F., White, L. M., & Cardinal, J.
(1988). Southeast Asian folklore about pregnancy and parturition.
Obstetrics & Gynecology, 71, 643-646.
Leedam, E. (1985). Traditional birth attendants. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 23(4), 249-274.
Lefkarites, M. P. (1992). The socio-cultural implications of modernizing childbirth among Greek women on the island of Rhodes. Medical Anthropology, 13, 385-412.
Liamputtong, P., Yimyam, S., Parisunyakul, S., Baosoung, C., & Sansiriphun. N. (2005). Traditional beliefs about pregnancy and child birth among women from Chiang Mai, Northern Thailand. Midwifery, 21(2), 139-153.
Liamputtong, P & Manderson, L. (eds). Maternity and reproductive health in Asian societies. Amsterdam: Harwod Academic Publisher, 1996.
Liamputtong, P., & Watson, L. F. (2006). The meanings and experiences of cesarean birth among Cambodian, Lao and Vietnamese immigrant women in Australia. Women and Health, 42(3), 63-82.
Manderson, L. (1981). Roasting, smoking and dieting in response to birth: Malay confinement in cross-cultural perspectives. Social Science and Medicine, 15B, 509-520.
Manderson, L. (1987). Hot-cold food and medical theories: Overview and introduction. Social Science and Medicine, 25(4), 329-330.
McCallum, C. (2005). Explaining caesarean section in Salvador
da Bahia, Brazil. Sociology of Health and Illness, 27,
215-242.
McLachlan, H., & Waldenstrom, U. (2005). Childbirth experiences in Australia of women born in Turkey, Vietnam, and Australia. Birth: Issues in Perinatal Care, 32(4), 272-282.
McLeish, J. (December 2005). Maternity experiences of asylum seekers in England. British Journal of Midwifery, 13(12), 782-785.
Melville, B., & Francis, V. (1992). Dietary habits and superstitions of rural Jamacian women during pregnancy. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 46, 373-374.
Michaelson, K. L. (1988). Childbirth in America: Anthropological perspectives. South Hadley, Mass: Bergin & Garvey Publishers.
Muecke, M. A. (2002). Health care systems are socializing agents: Childbearing in the North Thai and Western ways. Social Scient & Medicine, 10(7-8), 377-383.
Nabb, J. (December 2006). Pregnant asylum-seekers: Perceptions of maternity service provision. Evidence Based Midwifery, 4(3), 89-95.
Nahas, V., & Amasheh, N. (1999). Culture care meanings and experiences of postpartum depression among Jordanian Australian women: A transcultural study. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 10(1), 37-45.
Nieto, J. A. (2004). Children and adolescents as sexual beings: Cross-cultural perspectives. Child and Asolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 13(3), 461-477.
Pearce, C. (1998). Seeking a healthy baby: Hispanic women's views of pregnancy and prenatal care. Clinical Excellence for Nursing Practitioners, 2(6), 352-361.
Phillips, W. (2005). Cravings, marks, and open pores: Acculturation and preservation of pregnancy-related beliefs and practices among mothers of African descent in the United States. Ethos, 33(2), 231-255.
Posmontier, B., & Andrews Horowitz, J. (2004). Postpartum
practices and depression prevalences: Technocentric and ethnokinship
cultural perspectives. Journal of Transcultural Nursing,
15, 34-43.
Quinones-Mayo, Y., & Dempsey, P. (2005). Finding the bicultural balance: Immigrant Latino mothers raising "American" adolescents. School Social Work, 84(5), 649-667.
Reynolds, F., & Shams, M. (2005). Views on cultural barriers to caring for South Asian women. British Journal of Midwifery, 13(4), 236-242.
Roberts, K. S. (2003). The long road home. Providing culturally
sensitive care to the childbearing Islamic family: Part II.
Advances in Neonatal Care, 3, 250-255.
Rolls, C., & Chamberlain, M. (2004). From east to west:
Nepalese women's experiences. International Nursing Review,
51(3), 176-184.
Rolls, C., & Chamberlain, M. (2005). A gift from the gods: Nepalese women's childbirth and early parenting experiences. Asian Journal of Nursing Studies, 8(1), 23-21.
Rossiter, J. C. (1992). Maternal-infant health beliefs and infant feeding practices: The perception and experience of immigrant Vietnamese women in Sydney. Contemporary Nurse, 1(2), 75-76, 79.
Safadi, R. (2005). Jordanian women: perceptions and practices of first-time pregnancy. International Journal of Nursing Practice, 11(6), 269-276.
Schott, J., & Henley, A. (2002). Culture, religion and childbearing in a multiracial society: A handbook for health professionals. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann.
Semenic, S. E., Callister, L. C., & Feldman, P. (2004,
January-Febraury). Giving birth: The voices of Orthodox Jewish
women living in Canda. Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic,
and Neonatal Nursing, 33(1), 80-87.
Shams, M. (2002). Cultural issues in prenatal care and midwifery practice. Social Behavior and Personality, 30, 567-570.
Sharts-Hopko, N. (1995). Birth in the Japanese context. Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal Nursing, 24, 343-351.
Shelp, A. (2004). Women helping women: The Somali Doula initiative.
International Journal of Childbirth Education, 19, 4-6.
Sibeko, L., Dhansay, M. A., Chariton, K. E., Johns, T., & Gray-Donald, K. (2005). Beliefs, attitudes, and practices of breastfeeding mothers from a periurban community in South Africa. Journal of Human Lactation, 21(1), 31-38.
Sich, D. (1988). Traditional concepts and customs on pregnancy, birth, and post partum preiod in rural Korea. Social Science and Medicine, 15B, 65-69.
Small, R., Lumley, J., & Yelland, J. (2003). Cross-cultural
experiences of maternal depression: Associations and contributing
factors for Vietnamese, Turkish and Filipino immigrant women
in Victoria, Australia. Ethnicity and Health, 8, 189-206.
Small, R., Rice, P., Yelland, J., & Lumley, J. (1999). Mothers in a new country: The role of culture and communication in Vietnamese, Turkish, and Filipino Women's experiences of giving birth in Australia. Women & Health, 28(3), 77-101.
Small, R., Yelland, J., Brown S., & Liamputtong, P. (2002). Immigrant women's views about care during labor and birth: An Australian study of Vietnamese, Turkish, and Filipino women. Birth, 29, 266-277.
Steinberg, S. (1996). Childbearing research: A transcultural review. Social Science and Medicine, 43, 1765-1784.
Stuchbery, M., Matthey, S., & Barnett, B. (1998). Postnatal depression and social supports in Vietnamese, Arabic and Anglo-Celtic mothers. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 33(10), 483-490.
Thairu, L. N., Pleto, G. H., Rollins, N. C., Bland. R. M., & Ntshagase, N. (2005). Sociocultural influences on infant feeding decisions among HIV-infected women in rural Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa. Maternal and Child Nutrition, 1(1), 2-10.
Tham, G. (1994). Childbearing practices of Chinese women. In Rice, P., L. (Ed.) Asian mothers, Australian cirth (pp 77-98). Melbourne Austrailia: Ausmed: 1994.
Tsianakas, V., & Liamputtong, P. (2002). Prenatal testing: The perceptions and experienced of Muslin women in Australia. Journal of Reproductive Infant Psychology, 20, 7-24.
VanDerslice, J., Popkin, B., & Briscoe, J. (1994). Drinking-water quality, sanitation, and breast-feeding: Their interactive effects on infant health. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 72(4), 589-601.
Wachuku-king, S., & Stanley, S. (1994). The state of motherhood in Sierra Leone. Africa Health, 16(6), 10-11.
Walsh, L. V. (2006, April). Beliefs and rituals in traditional birth attendant practice in Guatemala. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 17(2), 148-154.
Williamson, N. E. (1990). Breast-feeding trends and the breast-feeding promotion programme in the Phillippines. Asia-Pacific Population Journal/ United Nations , 5(1), 113-124.
Woollett, A., Dosanjh, N., & Nicolson, P., et al. (1995). The ideas and experiences of pregnancy and childbirth of Asian and non-Asian women in East London. British Journal of Medical Psychology, 68, 65-84.
Young, D. (2002). Nursing and traditional birth practice:
Exploring the need for cultural sensitivity. Nursing, 3,
16-20.
©Jacquelyn
Coughlan, February 2008 (110 Citations)
|