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Author: Stephan Curtis
Publication title: The Arrival and Diffusion of Academic Medicine in Rural Sweden: The Case of the Sundsvall Region in the late Nineteenth Century
Publication type: Journal Article
Volume: 10
Issue: 1
Article No.: 2
Language: English
Abstract: Midwives working in rural 19th-cetnruy Swedish parishes were essential to the introduction and acceptance of academic medicine. They were typically highly skilled and the full support of the state but numerous obstacles confronted them. None was greater than the struggle to gain the trust of local women and their families. This study demonstrates that midwives’ ability to attract expectant mother away from traditional help-women depended less upon their age, level of skill or social background than it did upon the public’s assessment of their abilities. News spread quickly if a midwife had used her skills to save a life or lives, or had attended a birth that had resulted in the death of the infant or mother. The strength of social networks either encouraged other women to call upon the services of that midwife or, alternatively, caused them to reassess the level of trust that they had bestowed upon her.
Keywords: Diffusion, Midwifery, Rural Medicine, Sweden, Trust, Social Networks
PDF
Publisher: Linköping University Electronic Press, Linköpings universitet
Year: 2011
Available: 2011-01-24
No. of pages: 26
Pages: 7-32
Journal: Hygiea Internationalis : An Interdisciplinary Journal for the History of Public Health
ISSN (print): 1403-8668
ISSN (online): 1404-4013
File: http://www.ep.liu.se/ej/hygiea/v10/i1/a02/hygiea11v10i1a02.pdf

REFERENCE TO THIS PAGE
Curtis, Stephan (2011). The Arrival and Diffusion of Academic Medicine in Rural Sweden: The Case of the Sundsvall Region in the late Nineteenth Century. http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/hygiea.1403-8668.111017 ()