Abstract
A human rights violation, obstetric violence encompasses numerous forms of mistreatment against women giving birth in health care facilities. Based on this framework, we conducted open-ended exit interviews with 43 women who had given birth at either one of the two largest public maternity hospitals in the Dominican Republic. Women’s narratives revealed a contrast between scholarly definitions of obstetric violence and their own perceptions of receiving abusive care. Analyzing obstetric violence as a form of reproductive governance and the adaptive preference that ensues helps explain why most women accepted with endurance the poor quality of care that they received.
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Castro, A., & Savage, V. (2019). Obstetric Violence as Reproductive Governance in the Dominican Republic. Medical Anthropology: Cross Cultural Studies in Health and Illness, 38(2), 123–136. https://doi.org/10.1080/01459740.2018.1512984
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