Literature DB >> 17225654

At the back stage of prenatal care: Japanese Ob-Gyns negotiating prenatal diagnosis.

Tsipy Ivry1.   

Abstract

In this article, I explore the reluctance of Japanese ob-gyns to discuss prenatal diagnosis (PND) tests with pregnant women. The analysis focuses on the culturally specific ways in which ob-gyns formulate their cautiousness and criticism toward PND while invoking a local moral economy. Analyzing ob-gyns' accounts, I show how the ambiguities of PND are constituted in a specific moment in Japanese culture, history, disability politics, and national reproductive policies and are formulated through local paradigms of thinking about pregnant women, their fetuses, and the process of becoming a person in Japanese society. Finally, I show how PND in Japan is pushed to a "back-stage" realm in which the diagnosis for fetal anomalies is practiced in secrecy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17225654     DOI: 10.1525/maq.2006.20.4.441

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


  3 in total

1.  Expectant Israeli fathers and the medicalized pregnancy: ambivalent compliance and critical pragmatism.

Authors:  Tsipy Ivry; Elly Teman
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2008-09

2.  Re-visioning Ultrasound through Women's Accounts of Pre-abortion Care in England.

Authors:  Siân M Beynon-Jones
Journal:  Gend Soc       Date:  2015-10

3.  Why do patients decline amniocentesis? Analysis of factors influencing the decision to refuse invasive prenatal testing.

Authors:  Pawel Sadlecki; Marek Grabiec; Pawel Walentowicz; Malgorzata Walentowicz-Sadlecka
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2018-05-16       Impact factor: 3.007

  3 in total

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