Call For Papers
The Centre for the History of Health and Healthcare
(CSHHH)
Glasgow,
July 2020
We warmly in invite researchers and academics from the
social sciences and health humanities submit abstracts, but we would also like
to invite practitioners working in low income communities to contribute. As
2020 is the Year of the Nurse and the Midwife, related papers would be
particularly welcome.
Women living in poverty have always suffered greater
health risks during pregnancy than their wealthier counterparts. Even in
western countries where vast amounts of money are spent on healthcare, birth
outcomes tend to be poorer in low-income communities than in wealthier
neighbourhoods. Poor women are also less likely (or less able) to fully engage
with the available healthcare. Yet despite these longstanding challenges, we
understand little about women’s pregnancy experiences while living on low
incomes.
While in recent years, scholars and practitioners across
a range of disciplines have increasingly investigated health inequalities and
considered how best to address them, pregnancy has attracted limited attention
from the medical humanities. Funded by the Wellcome Trust, this Pregnancy,
Poverty and Health Workshop will facilitate interdisciplinary discussions by
inviting a range of research into the relationships between pregnancy, poverty
and health. We welcome proposals for papers which address any aspect of such
relationships, but may include:
•Patient-practitioner relationships
•Health and welfare initiatives and advocacy for change
•Health education
•Issues of race, ethnicity or maternal age
•Place specific
factors (urban/rural, climate, culture)
•Experiences of pregnancy on
low-incomes (prenatal, childbirth and postnatal)
•Pregnancy and mental health
•Religious, cultural or social influences on maternal behavior
•Complex
pregnancies and medical technologies
•Household economics
Paper proposals should include a 200-250 word abstract
and a brief 100-150 word biography with contact information by 2 April,
2020. This workshop is supported by the
Centre for the Social History of Health and Healthcare (CSHHH Glasgow), the Wellcome
Trust and Glasgow Caledonian University.
All submissions and questions to: Janet.Greenlees@gcu.ac.uk
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire