About this book series
Global Maternal and Child Health: Medical, Anthropological, and Public Health Perspectives is a series of books that will provide the most comprehensive and current sources of information on a wide range of topics related to global maternal and child health, written by a collection of international experts.
The health of pregnant women and their children are among the most significant public health, medical, and humanitarian problems in the world today. Because in developing countries many people are poor, and young women are the poorest of the poor, persistent poverty exacerbates maternal and child morbidity and mortality and gender-based challenges to such basic human rights as education and access to health care and reproductive choices. Women and their children remain the most vulnerable members of our society and, as a result, are the most impacted individuals by many of the threats that are prevalent, and, in some cases, increasing throughout the world. These include emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, natural and man-made disasters, armed conflict, religious and political turmoil, relocation as refugees, malnutrition, and, in some cases, starvation. The status of indigenous women and children is especially precarious in many regions because of ethnic, cultural, and language differences, resulting in stigmatization, poor obstetrical and neonatal outcomes, limitations of women’s reproductive rights, and lack of access to family planning and education that restrict choices regarding their own futures. Because of the inaccessibility of women to contraception and elective pregnancy termination, unsafe abortion continues to result in maternal deaths, morbidity, and reproductive complications. Unfortunately, maternal deaths remain at unacceptably high levels in the majority of developing countries, as well as in some developed ones. Stillbirths and premature deliveries result in millions of deaths annually. Gender inequality persists globally as evidenced by the occurrence of female genital mutilation, obstetrical violence, human trafficking, and other forms of sexual discrimination directed at women. Many children are routinely exposed to physical, sexual, and psychological violence. Childhood and teen marriages remain at undesirably high levels in many developing countries.
Global Maternal and Child Health: Medical, Anthropological, and Public Health Perspectives is unique in combining the opinions and expertise of public health specialists, physicians, anthropologists and social scientists, epidemiologists, nurses, midwives, and representatives of governmental and non governmental agencies to comprehensively explore the increasing challenges and potential solutions to global maternal and child health issues.
- Electronic ISSN
- 2522-8390
- Print ISSN
- 2522-8382
- Series Editor
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- David A. Schwartz
Book titles in this series
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A Multidisciplinary Approach to Obstetric Fistula in Africa
Public Health, Anthropological, and Medical Perspectives
- Editors:
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- Laura Briggs Drew
- Bonnie Ruder
- David A. Schwartz
- Copyright: 2022
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- Soft cover
- eBook
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Sustainable Birth in Disruptive Times
- Editors:
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- Kim Gutschow
- Robbie Davis-Floyd
- Betty-Anne Daviss
- Copyright: 2021
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- Soft cover
- eBook
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Anthropologies of Global Maternal and Reproductive Health
From Policy Spaces to Sites of Practice
- Editors:
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- Lauren J. Wallace
- Margaret E. MacDonald
- Katerini T. Storeng
- Open Access
- Copyright: 2022
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- Soft cover
- eBook
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Pregnant in the Time of Ebola
Women and Their Children in the 2013-2015 West African Epidemic
- Editors:
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- David A. Schwartz
- Julienne Ngoundoung Anoko
- Sharon A. Abramowitz
- Copyright: 2019
Available Renditions
- Hard cover
- eBook