Social construction of obstetric violence of Tenek and Nahuatl women in Mexico
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Objective: To explore the social construction of obstetric violence developed by Tenek and Nahuatl women in Mexico. Method: Qualitative, socio-critical study conducted through focal groups in which were deepened the childbirth experiences lived in the period 2015-2016. Results: Participation of 57 women. Through discourse analysis, it was identified that participants do not have enough information about obstetric violence and/ or sexual and reproductive rights. This makes the association of their negative experiences with the legal term obstetric violence impossible. Most of their speeches correspond to the legal denomination of obstetric violence. Experiences like prolonged fasting or the use of technologies for invading their privacy were narrated like situations they perceive as violent, but have not been incorporated within the legal term. Conclusion: Multiple actions against women%27s human rights take place within delivery rooms. Most remain unidentified by users, since they have not socially constructed the image of obstetric violence. However, that fact does not make them less susceptible to feel attacked and denigrated during their childbirth experiences. © 2019 Escola de Enfermagem de Universidade de Sao Paulo.
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Objective: To explore the social construction of obstetric violence developed by Tenek and Nahuatl women in Mexico. Method: Qualitative, socio-critical study conducted through focal groups in which were deepened the childbirth experiences lived in the period 2015-2016. Results: Participation of 57 women. Through discourse analysis, it was identified that participants do not have enough information about obstetric violence and/ or sexual and reproductive rights. This makes the association of their negative experiences with the legal term obstetric violence impossible. Most of their speeches correspond to the legal denomination of obstetric violence. Experiences like prolonged fasting or the use of technologies for invading their privacy were narrated like situations they perceive as violent, but have not been incorporated within the legal term. Conclusion: Multiple actions against women's human rights take place within delivery rooms. Most remain unidentified by users, since they have not socially constructed the image of obstetric violence. However, that fact does not make them less susceptible to feel attacked and denigrated during their childbirth experiences. © 2019 Escola de Enfermagem de Universidade de Sao Paulo.
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Delivery rooms; Indigenous population; Obstetric nursing; Parturition; Violence against women adult; article; childbirth; controlled study; delivery room; discourse analysis; fasting; female; human; human experiment; major clinical study; Mexico; obstetrical nursing; privacy; reproductive rights; speech; violence; adolescent; American Indian; ethnology; human rights; information processing; Mexico; nomenclature; obstetric delivery; pregnancy; pregnant woman; psychology; violence; young adult; Adolescent; Adult; Delivery, Obstetric; Female; Focus Groups; Human Rights; Humans; Indians, North American; Mexico; Pregnancy; Pregnant Women; Reproductive Rights; Terminology as Topic; Violence; Young Adult
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