Search for an item in libraries near you:
SUNY Home Index Map News Search Support Write Us Academic Administrative Admission - Financial Aid Alumni Library Regional Information Student Affairs
SUNY Utica/Rome [Navigation Bar]


CulturedMed


Search CulturedMed
 

BIBLIOGRAPHIES
Groups:
    Afghanis
    African
    Arab
    Asian
    Bantu
    Bosnian
    Burmese
    Ethiopian
    Hispanic
    Hmong
    Muslim

    Puerto Rican
    Russian
    Somali
    Sudanese
    Vietnamese

Cultural Aspects of:

    Advance Directives
    AIDS

    Books
    Childbearing
    Cultural Competency
    Death & Dying
    Dental Care
    Diabetes
    Domestic Violence
    Epilepsy
    Ethnogerontology
    Ethnography
    Ethnopharmacology
    Female Circumcision
    Food
    Hospice
    International Nursing    
    Khat 

    Medical Interpreters
    Mental Health
    Tuberculosis
    Traditional Medicine
    Transcultural Nursing
    Truth Disclosure
    Women and Children


DICTIONARIES & GLOSSARIES

CULTURAL PROFILES

CULTURE & HEALTH WEBSITES

REFUGEE & IMMIGRANT HEALTH DATABASES

REFUGEE/IMMIGRANT HEALTH POLICY

MULTILINGUAL HEALTH MATERIALS

ORGANIZATIONS/OFFICES

REFUGEE/IMMIGRANT STATISTICS

LIBRARIES WITH ETHNIC COLLECTIONS

RESETTLEMENT AGENCIES

CONTACT INFORMATION


 
 

Cultural Aspects of Childbearing and Childrearing


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)
 

SUNYIT HOME |ACADEMIC |ADMINISTRATIVE |ADMISSION |ALUMNI |LIBRARY |REGIONAL INFO |STUDENT AFFAIRS