Willing and Unable: Doctors' Constraints in Abortion Care

Capa
Vanderbilt University Press, 09/08/2010 - 200 páginas
Willing and Unable explores the social world where abortion politics and mainstream medicine collide. The author interviewed physicians of obstetrics and gynecology around the United States to find out why physicians rarely integrate abortion into their medical practice. While abortion stigma, violence, and political contention provide some explanation, her findings demonstrate that willing physicians are further encumbered by a variety of barriers within their practice environments.
Structural barriers to the mainstream practice of abortion effectively institutionalize the buck-passing of abortion patients to abortion clinics. As the author notes, "Public-health-minded HMOs and physician practices could significantly change the world of abortion care if they stopped outsourcing it."
Drawing from forty in-depth interviews, the book presents a challenge to a commonly held assumption that physicians decide whether or not to provide abortion based on personal ideology. Physician narratives demonstrate how their choices around learning, doing, and even having abortions themselves disrupt the pro-choice/pro-life moral and political binary.
 

Índice

1 Introduction
1
A Recent History
20
3 Unwilling Willing and Why
37
On Learning Doing and Having Abortions
60
5 Practice Constraints and the Institutionalized BuckPassing of Abortion Care
91
6 Abortion Prohibitions and Miscarriage Management in CatholicOwned Health Care
118
7 Conclusion
138
Appendix A Abortion Terminology
153
Appendix B A Methodological Note on City Size
157
Notes
159
Works Cited
173
Index
183
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Lori R. Freedman is a sociologist at ANSIRH, a program of the Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health at the University of California, San Francisco.

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