Can some help update this assignment?
Deanna Earl Seminar in Medical Humanities -MHU 4813 Professor: Abraham Graber
Bibliography
A doctor's job involves assisting to serve families by helping pregnant mothers achieve safe
deliveries. Giving birth and settling in with newborn infants marks a significant transition in
human existence. Many factors motivate young people to pursue medical studies. For instance,
studies on infant mortality rates may prompt an individual to ship in the medical field to assist
African-American women who are highly affected by community mortality rates. This
bibliography's primary focus is to reflect on how we can bring awareness to the high rate of infant
and mortality rate.
Infant mortality refers to the number of deaths of children who are below two years of age.
In a health and maternal journal, Mottl-Santiago et al. (375) elaborate on infant mortalities by
providing astonishing statistic data. Gazmaranian et al (235) state that 74.4% of all preterm births
in the world account for infants born between 34-36 weeks after gestation, referred to as preterm
infants. Another study by MacDorman (811) indicates the number of infants born at late preterm to
be one-third of the overall mortality rates, where in 2002, the figure meant that in every 1000 live
births, about 8 infants are at greater risks of succumbing to neo natal complications when
compared to their counterparts (Roberts 150). However, Davis indicates a declining number of
mortality rates in his report and claims the higher numbers experienced before to be results of
premature births and medical racism.
Doctors are required to perform their responsibilities and help bring the mortality rates
down thereby help in saving lives. According to McDaniels, the medical staff should work on
decreasing the recovery time for newly conceived mothers, where they may assist in reducing an
epidural, or involve doula care (Kozhimannil et al. 23), which result to less medical interventions
and better care for pregnant mothers.
Deanna Earl Seminar in Medical Humanities -MHU 4813 Professor: Abraham Graber
Work Cited
Deanna Earl Seminar in Medical Humanities -MHU 4813 Professor: Abraham Graber Davis, Dána-Ain. Reproductive Injustice: Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth. NYU Press,
2019.
King, Gazmararian, et al. "Disparities in Mortality Rates Among US Infants Born Late Preterm or
Early Term, 2003–2005." Maternal and Child Health Journal, vol. 18, no. 1, Springer
Science and Business Media LLC, Jan. 2014, pp. 233–41, doi:10.1007/s10995-013-1259-0.
Kozhimannil, Katy B., et al. "Modeling the cost‐effectiveness of doula care associated with
reductions in preterm birth and cesarean delivery." Birth 43.1 (2016): 20-27.
MacDorman, Marian F., Eugene Declercq, and Marie E. Thoma. "Trends in maternal mortality by
socio-demographic characteristics and cause of death in 27 states and the District of
Columbia." Obstetrics and gynaecology 129.5 (2017): 811.
McDaniels, A. "Baltimore Enlists Doulas to help bring infant mortality rate down." The Baltimore
Sun (2017).
Mottl-Santiago, Julie, et al. "A Hospital-Based Doula Program and Childbirth Outcomes in an
Urban, Multicultural Setting." Maternal and Child Health Journal, vol. 12, no. 3, Springer
US, May 2008, pp. 372–77, doi:10.1007/s10995-007-0245- 9.
Roberts, Jessica F. "'The little coffin': Anthologies, Conventions and Dead Children."
Representations of Death in Nineteenth-Century US Writing and Culture. Routledge, 2018.
141-154.