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“Ashamed, silent and stuck in a system” : Applying a structural violence lens to midwives’ stories on social disadvantage in pregnancy Eva Neely, Briony Raven, Lesley Dixon, Carol Bartle and Carmen Timu-Parata

By: Neely, Eva.
Contributor(s): , Raven, Briony | Dixon, Lesley | Bartle, Carol | Timu-Parata, Carmen.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.Publisher: MDPI, 2020Subject(s): FAMILY VIOLENCE | HEALTH SERVICES | MIDWIVES | POVERTY | PREGNANCY | RACISM | REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH | SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.3390%2Fijerph17249355 (Open access) In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2020, 17: 9355Summary: Historical and enduring maternal health inequities and injustices continue to grow in Aotearoa New Zealand, despite attempts to address the problem. Pregnancy increases vulnerability to poverty through a variety of mechanisms. This project qualitatively analysed an open survey response from midwives about their experiences of providing maternity care to women living with social disadvantage. We used a structural violence lens to examine the effects of social disadvantage on pregnant women. The analysis of midwives’ narratives exposed three mechanisms by which women were exposed to structural violence, these included structural disempowerment, inequitable risk and the neoliberal system. Women were structurally disempowered through reduced access to agency, lack of opportunities and inadequate meeting of basic human needs. Disadvantage exacerbated risks inequitably by increasing barriers to care, exacerbating the impact of adverse life circumstances and causing chronic stress. Lastly, the neoliberal system emphasised individual responsibility that perpetuated inequities. Despite the stated aim of equitable access to health care for all in policy documents, the current system and social structure continues to perpetuate systemic disadvantage. (Authors' abstract). Record #7004
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International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2020, 17(24): 9355

Historical and enduring maternal health inequities and injustices continue to grow in Aotearoa New Zealand, despite attempts to address the problem. Pregnancy increases vulnerability to poverty through a variety of mechanisms. This project qualitatively analysed an open survey response from midwives about their experiences of providing maternity care to women living with social disadvantage. We used a structural violence lens to examine the effects of social disadvantage on pregnant women. The analysis of midwives’ narratives exposed three mechanisms by which women were exposed to structural violence, these included structural disempowerment, inequitable risk and the neoliberal system. Women were structurally disempowered through reduced access to agency, lack of opportunities and inadequate meeting of basic human needs. Disadvantage exacerbated risks inequitably by increasing barriers to care, exacerbating the impact of adverse life circumstances and causing chronic stress. Lastly, the neoliberal system emphasised individual responsibility that perpetuated inequities. Despite the stated aim of equitable access to health care for all in policy documents, the current system and social structure continues to perpetuate systemic disadvantage. (Authors' abstract). Record #7004