Low birth weight in Aboriginal babies--a need for rethinking Aboriginal women's pregnancies and birthing.

Heather Hancock
Author Information
  1. Heather Hancock: heather.hancock@unisa.edu.au

Abstract

Low birth weight in Aboriginal babies has become a persistent quandary as their average birth weight continues to be lower than that of non-Aboriginal babies. Arguments, reviews and research abound to explain this difference which is deemed unacceptable and needing resolution. A pr��cis review of current theories and findings around low birth weight in Aboriginal babies is presented as a background for much needed alternative considerations of this issue. The low birth weight dilemma requires urgent rethinking of Aboriginal women's experiences and feelings of their pregnancies and possible effects on their unborn babies. There is a critical need for empowerment of Aboriginal women that goes beyond rhetoric and dominant ideologies about what is best for them and their babies, and genuinely enables them to assume control and self-determinism in ways that might make a significant difference, including importantly to their babies' birth weights.

MeSH Term

Adult
Australia
Birth Weight
Breast Feeding
Female
Humans
Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Infant, Low Birth Weight
Infant, Newborn
Midwifery
Mother-Child Relations
Mothers
Nurse's Role
Postnatal Care
Risk Assessment
Rural Population
Weight Gain

Word Cloud

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