Literature DB >> 15272806

Free markets and dead mothers: the social ecology of maternal mortality in post-socialist Mongolia.

Craig R Janes1, Oyuntsetseg Chuluundorj.   

Abstract

Beginning in 1990, Mongolia, a former client state of what was then the Soviet Union, undertook liberal economic reforms. These came as a great shock to Mongolia and Mongolians, and resulted in food shortages, reports of famine, widespread unemployment, and a collapse of public health and health care. Although economic conditions have stabilized in recent years, unemployment and poverty are still at disturbingly high levels. One important consequence of the transition has been the transformation of the rural, primarily pastoral, economy. With de-collectivization, herding households have been thrown into a highly insecure subsistence mode of production, and, as a consequence, have become vulnerable to local fluctuations in rainfall and availability and quality of forage, and many now lack access to traded staples and essential commodities. Household food insecurity, malnutrition, and migration of impoverished households to provincial centers and the capital of Ulaanbaatar are one result. Reductions to investments in the health sector have also eroded the quality of services in rural areas, and restricted access to those services still functioning. Evidence suggests that women are particularly vulnerable to these political-ecological changes, and that this vulnerability is manifested in increasing rates of poor reproductive health and maternal mortality. Drawing on case-study ethnographic and epidemiological data, this article explores the links between neoliberal economic reform and maternal mortality in Mongolia.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15272806     DOI: 10.1525/maq.2004.18.2.230

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  8 in total

1.  Tracking maternal mortality declines in Mongolia between 1992 and 2007: the importance of collaboration.

Authors:  Buyanjargal Yadamsuren; Mario Merialdi; Ishnyam Davaadorj; Jennifer Harris Requejo; Ana Pilar Betrán; Asima Ahmad; Pagvajav Nymadawa; Tudevdorj Erkhembaatar; Delia Barcelona; Katherine Ba-Thike; Robert J Hagan; Richard Prado; Wolf Wagner; Seded Khishgee; Tserendorj Sodnompil; Baatar Tsedmaa; Baldan Jav; Salik R Govind; Genden Purevsuren; Baldan Tsevelmaa; Bayaraa Soyoltuya; Brooke R Johnson; Peter Fajans; Paul Fa Van Look; Altankhuyag Otgonbold
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2009-10-22       Impact factor: 9.408

2.  A comparison of migrants to, and women born in, urban Mongolia: demographic, reproductive, anthropometric and lifestyle characteristics.

Authors:  Davaasambuu Ganmaa; Janet W Rich-Edwards; Lindsay A Frazier; Dambadarjaa Davaalkham; Gankhuyag Oyunbileg; Craig Janes; Nancy Potischman; Robert Hoover; Rebecca Troisi
Journal:  Int Health       Date:  2013-08-04       Impact factor: 2.473

3.  Huge poor-rich inequalities in maternity care: an international comparative study of maternity and child care in developing countries.

Authors:  Tanja A J Houweling; Carine Ronsmans; Oona M R Campbell; Anton E Kunst
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2007-10       Impact factor: 9.408

4.  It Takes More than a Village: Building a Network of Safety in Nepal's Mountain Communities.

Authors:  Vincanne Adams; Sienna Craig; Arlene Samen; Surya Bhatta
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2016-12

5.  Natural calamities and 'the Big Migration': challenges to the Mongolian health system in 'the Age of the Market'.

Authors:  Benedikte V Lindskog
Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2014-08-18

6.  "Playing the numbers game": evidence-based advocacy and the technocratic narrowing of the Safe Motherhood Initiative.

Authors:  Katerini T Storeng; Dominique P Béhague
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2014-03-06

7.  Introduction. Politics and practices of global health: critical ethnographies of health systems.

Authors:  Katerini T Storeng; Arima Mishra
Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2014

8.  Exploring the consequences of decentralization: has privatization of health services been the perceived effect of decentralization in Khartoum locality, Sudan?

Authors:  Bandar Noory; Sara A Hassanain; Benedikte Victoria Lindskog; Asma Elsony; Gunnar Aksel Bjune
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-07-20       Impact factor: 2.655

  8 in total

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