All cool…thanks! V busy as new semester started…
KR
L
From: A forum for discussion on midwifery and reproductive health
research. [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Alison McFadden (Staff)
Sent: 14 September 2016 12:02
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Where there is no midwives
Hi Sophie,
Afghanistan is a good recent example. There are several published articles –
2.
Jeffrey M. Smith, Sheena Currie, Pashtoon Azfar, Ahmed Javed Rahmanzai, Establishment of an accreditation system for midwifery education in Afghanistan: Maintaining
quality during national expansion, Public Health, Volume 122, Issue 6, June 2008, Pages 558-567
3. Partamin Zainullah, Nasratullah Ansari, Khalid Yari, Mahmood Azimi, Sabera Turkmani, Pashtoon Azfar, Amnesty LeFevre, Jaime Mungia, Rehana Gubin, Young-Mi Kim, Linda Bartlett, Establishing midwifery in low-resource settings: Guidance from a mixed-methods evaluation of the Afghanistan midwifery education program, Midwifery, Volume 30, Issue 10, October 2014, Pages 1056-1062
Good luck
Alison
From: A forum for discussion on midwifery and reproductive health
research. [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Sophie Goyet
Sent: 14 September 2016 10:07
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Where there is no midwives
Dear Colleagues,
I am looking for references on countries where is still no midwifery degrees in public school (India, Nepal, where else in 2016?).
I am also looking at articles, blog notes etc on transition toward midwifery education, successfull stories who have developped and implemented midwifery education.
Many thanks for your help!
Sophie, midwife researcher in Nepal
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