Literature DB >> 11508100

Medicalization and women's knowledge: the construction of understandings of infant feeding experiences in post-WW II New Zealand.

K M Ryan1, V M Grace.   

Abstract

For most of the twentieth century infant feeding knowledge has been constructed by medical scientists and health professionals. However, for a short time around the 1970s, New Zealand women (re)claimed the power to author their own knowledge based upon experience. This coincided with a dramatic return to breastfeeding on a national scale. Using New Zealand women's narratives of their infant feeding experiences over the past 50 years, this article brings to the foreground the importance of women's subjective construction of knowledge, their positioning within it, and the suppression of rudimentary discourses when that power is removed or relinquished in the process of remedicalization.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11508100     DOI: 10.1080/073993301317094308

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Women Int        ISSN: 0739-9332


  2 in total

Review 1.  A meta-ethnographic synthesis of women's experience of breastfeeding.

Authors:  Elaine Burns; Virginia Schmied; Athena Sheehan; Jennifer Fenwick
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2010-07-01       Impact factor: 3.092

2.  Narratives about illness and medication: a neglected theme/new methodology within pharmacy practice research. Part II: medication narratives in practice.

Authors:  Kath Ryan; Paul Bissell; Charles Morecroft
Journal:  Pharm World Sci       Date:  2007-04-27
  2 in total

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