Community based midwives practice in patriarchal social system

Yasmeen Jan Mohammad, Rafat Jan

Research output: Other contributionpeer-review

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Abstract

It is well accepted globally, that midwives can save the lives of mothers and their new-born successfully, if the community stakeholders provide support and freedom for full scope of practice. Recognising this many countries deploy midwives in the community as an intervention to achieve the MDGs (Millennium Development Goals) 4 and 5 targets set for decreasing maternal and neonatal mortality, respectively.

However, high-income countries’ reports show very good results, in achieving MDGs 4 and 5 while the low-income countries lag behind in this regard. The situation in high-income and low-income countries is different because midwives practising in the community in low-income countries face many barriers. These barriers include a lack of understanding of midwives’ role, inadequate logistic arrangements, patriarchy, culture, and norms at the level of the family and society that affect all CMWs’ (Community Midwives) lives as women.

This case report seeks to explain how the pattern of the patriarchal social system imposes barriers on the practice of midwives in low-income countries, with particular focus on Pakistan. It also recommends that midwives should be empowered in order to deal with barriers that are imposed due to patriarchy and tradition.

Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2015

Publication series

NameJournal of Asian Midwives (JAM)

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