The Perfect Birth Myth: Pushing Back Against a Broken Industry
Autor Avital Norman Nathman, Deborah Wageen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 sep 2026
The Perfect Birth Myth offers a sweeping, deeply human exploration of childbirth in the United States, the country with the most highly resourced and costliest maternal healthcare in the world, yet the highest rate of maternal mortality among developed countries. Drawing on decades of experience in maternal health, midwifery, and journalism, Avital Norman Nathman and Deborah Wage weave historical analysis, policy insight, personal narratives, and data from approximately 3,000 people who've given birth to examine the forces shaping American birth culture. From the pursuit of the "perfect birth" and the commercialization of care to the racial and psychological inequities embedded in the system, they reveal how medicalization, racism, and profit-driven policies have eroded autonomy, safety, and dignity in childbirth.
Both exposé and call to action, The Perfect Birth Myth reframes birth as an act of justice, community, and self-determination. Readers will emerge with an understanding that instead of pushing for perfection, we should be pushing for equity, respect, and shared humanity.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9798216277262
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Introduction
Foreword
1. The Paradox of Perfection When It Comes to the Birth Industry.
2. The Birth of the Birth Plan.
3. From Fear to Fearless: The Psychology Behind the Perfect Birth.
4. Why Are We the Worst in the World?
5. White Supremacy, Racism, and a System Set Up to Fail People of Color.
6. It Pays to Give Birth, But Who's Making the Money, and at What Cost?
7. Pandemics Don't Give a Shit About Perfection.
8. Pushing Back.
9. We Need to Talk About Birth.
10. Solutions.
11. Resources.
12.Works Cited
Foreword
1. The Paradox of Perfection When It Comes to the Birth Industry.
2. The Birth of the Birth Plan.
3. From Fear to Fearless: The Psychology Behind the Perfect Birth.
4. Why Are We the Worst in the World?
5. White Supremacy, Racism, and a System Set Up to Fail People of Color.
6. It Pays to Give Birth, But Who's Making the Money, and at What Cost?
7. Pandemics Don't Give a Shit About Perfection.
8. Pushing Back.
9. We Need to Talk About Birth.
10. Solutions.
11. Resources.
12.Works Cited
Recenzii
Nathman and Wage offer a masterful integration of historical, psychological, and sociopolitical insight. Their exploration of perfectionism, systemic inequities, and the commercialization of birth mirrors the patterns I see in perinatal mental health where impossible standards fuel distress and disconnection. This book should be required reading for anyone shaping birth policy or practice in the United States.
The Perfect Birth Myth is an urgent and compassionate examination of what birthing people in the United States face every day. Avital Norman Nathman and Deborah Wage remind us that safe, respectful, and equitable care is not optional, it's a human right.
This book is a literal lifesaver for people considering pregnancy and motherhood. Nathman and Wage provide clear, informed, pragmatic, and compassionate context and advice for anyone who has to navigate the real consequence of America's maternal health crisis today.
With compassion, evidence and grace, The Perfect Birth Myth does something rare: it refuses to let you blame yourself. In a world that treats birth processes and outcomes as consumer decisions or measures of individual worth, this book illuminates how often they are, instead, the entirely predictable result of a for-profit healthcare system that profits from anxiety while neglecting the most marginalized. Ultimately, this book - a little like birth itself - is about power: who has it, who gets hurt when they don't, and what it would take to actually change that.
The Perfect Birth Myth is an urgent and compassionate examination of what birthing people in the United States face every day. Avital Norman Nathman and Deborah Wage remind us that safe, respectful, and equitable care is not optional, it's a human right.
This book is a literal lifesaver for people considering pregnancy and motherhood. Nathman and Wage provide clear, informed, pragmatic, and compassionate context and advice for anyone who has to navigate the real consequence of America's maternal health crisis today.
With compassion, evidence and grace, The Perfect Birth Myth does something rare: it refuses to let you blame yourself. In a world that treats birth processes and outcomes as consumer decisions or measures of individual worth, this book illuminates how often they are, instead, the entirely predictable result of a for-profit healthcare system that profits from anxiety while neglecting the most marginalized. Ultimately, this book - a little like birth itself - is about power: who has it, who gets hurt when they don't, and what it would take to actually change that.