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Best Practices in Midwifery (eBook)

Using the Evidence to Implement Change
Autor: Barbara A. (Hrsg.) Anderson
CHF 139.30
ISBN: 978-0-8261-3179-9
Einband: Adobe Digital Editions
Verfügbarkeit: Download, sofort verfügbar (Link per E-Mail)
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First Edition an AJN Book of the Year Award Winner!

This second edition of a groundbreaking book is substantially revised to deliver the foundation for an evidence-based model for best practices in midwifery, a model critical to raising the United States' current standing as the bottom-ranking country for maternity mortality among developed nations.With a focus on updated scientific evidence as the framework for midwifery practice, the book includes 21 completely new chapters that address bothcontinuing and new areas of practice, the impact of institutional and national policies, and the effects of diversity and globalization. Incorporating themidwifery model of care, the book provides strategies for change and guidance for implementing evidence-based best practices.

The book examines midwifery efforts to improve the health of women and children in the U.S., for example, Strong Start, US MERA, Centering Pregnancy, a focus on physiologic birth, and successful global endeavors. It encompasses a diverse nationwide authorship that includes leaders in midwifery,academicians, midwives representing diversity, hospital- and community-based practitioners, and policymakers. This coalition of authors from diversebackgrounds facilitates an engaging and robust discussion around best practices. Chapters open with a contemporary review of the literature, a comparisonof current (often scientifically unsubstantiated and ineffective) practices, evidence-based recommendations, and best practices for midwifery.

Key Features:

  • Focuses on scientific evidence as the framework for midwifery practice
  • Addresses continuing and new, controversial areas of practice with strategies and guidelines for change
  • Includes 20 out of 27 completely new chapters
  • Authored by a diverse group of 44 prominent midwifery leaders
  • Examines practices that are in conflict with scientific evidence

Autor Anderson, Barbara A. (Hrsg.) / Rooks, Judith P. (Hrsg.) / Barroso, Rebeca (Hrsg.)
Verlag Springer Publishing Company
Einband Adobe Digital Editions
Erscheinungsjahr 2016
Seitenangabe 568 S.
Ausgabekennzeichen Englisch
Masse 5'847 KB
Auflage 16002 A. 2. Auflage

Über den Autor Barbara A. (Hrsg.) Anderson

Barbara A. Anderson, DrPH, CNM, FACNM, FAAN, is professor emerita and a founding director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice at Frontier Nursing University, Lexington, Kentucky. She formerly served as administrative dean at Seattle University College of Nursing, Seattle, Washington, and faculty at Loma Linda University School of Public Health, Loma Linda, California. Promoting and enabling the health of mothers is her lifelong passion and she has deep experience in the USA and globally in public health, nurse-midwifery, and university administration and education. She was lead editor of The maternal health crisis in America: Nursing implications for advocacy and practice (2019)-an American Journal of Nursing (AJN) first-place award winner and lead editor of Best practices in midwifery: Using the evidence to implement change (2013, 2017), also first-place AJN award winner. She co-edited four editions of Caring for the vulnerable: Perspectives in nursing theory,research, and practice (2008, 2012, 2016, 2019) and co-authored a four-volume series on genocide, Warning signs of genocide (2013-2023), based upon genocidal experiences with refugees. She currently serves on the editorial board of the International Journal of Childbirth; the community advisory board of an NIH-funded childhood obesity study among low-income Hispanic mothers, University of California at Riverside, School of Medicine; and on the national team for the Accreditation Commission for Midwifery Education. She received the National League of Nursing Mary Adelaide Nutting Award for Outstanding Teaching (2019) and the American Association of Birth Centers Media Award (2018). She has been on teams at Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health examining refugee health and cultural competency in maternal health care.  Lisa R. Roberts, Dr.PH, FNP-BC, FAANP, FAAN, is professor and research director, School of Nursing, with secondary appointment in the School of Behavioral Health and a faculty scholar in the Institute for Health Policy and Leadership and the Center for Bioethics, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California. She maintains a full teaching load with graduate students and grant-procurement as research director. She has broad domestic and global experience in maternal health, perinatal grief, and vulnerable populations. Her research has focused on maternal vulnerability and perinatal grief. Also currently in clinical practice as a Nurse Practitioner, she has worked with multiple cultural groups in rural and urban settings in the USA and globally. She served as a consultant for Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health in the development of Cultural competency in maternal health care educational modules for healthcare professionals, and as a panel member for a seminar titled, Why are Black mothers and babies in a life-or-death crisis? A lesson on the disparities in maternal and infant mortality. In 2022 she completed a Fulbright Faculty award as a visiting scholar at Christian Medical College - Vellore, India. She is coeditor of The maternal health crisis in America: Nursing implications for advocacy and practice (2019), coeditor of Midwifery for nurses in India (2018), and an author on role transition among immigrant women in Caring for the Vulnerable: Perspectives in Nursing Theory, Practice, and Research, 4th Ed. (2015).

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