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_c9174 _d9174 |
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005 | 20250625151726.0 | ||
008 | 250324s2025 -nz||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
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_aParker, George _913806 |
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_aWarming the whare : _cGeorge Parker, Elizabeth Kerekere, Suzanne Miller, Sally Baddock, Jaimie Veale, Fleur Kelsey and Alex Ker _ban Indigenous knowledge centered guideline for trans health justice in perinatal care |
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_bTaylor & Francis, _c2025 |
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500 | _aInternational Journal of Transgender Health, 2025, First published online, 8 March 2025 | ||
520 | _aAccess to knowledgeable and skilled perinatal care is a human right and a cornerstone of health equity (WHO, Citationn.d.). It is well established through a recent expansion of research within Global North countries that transgender people and their families are currently under-served in perinatal care resulting from entrenched cis-heteronormative assumptions about reproduction and family building that erase and exclude trans people (e.g. Thomas et al., Citation2024). Trans people report non-affirming and discriminatory care which leads to reduced access to and engagement with services and inequitable outcomes (Thomas et al., Citation2024). The intersectional nature of trans exclusion in perinatal care has received less attention. This is an oversight because intersectional analyses demonstrate how trans exclusion overlaps and interacts with other systems of oppression including colonization, racism, classism, and ableism to normalize and privilege only the narrowest conceptualization of pregnant people and families in perinatal care: white, cisgender, heterosexual, able-bodied, socio-economically advantaged and organized in nuclear family units (Parker et al., in press). Perinatal care providers have expressed willingness and desire to improve their care for trans people and their families but lack guidance on how to achieve this (Miller et al., in press; Pezaro et al., Citation2023). Particularly lacking is guidance that addresses the intersectional roots of trans exclusion to produce safe and equitable conditions for all people in perinatal care. (From the introduction). Record #9174 | ||
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_aANGA _96926 |
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_aGUIDELINES _92786 |
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_aHĀPU (WĀHINE) _95531 |
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_aHAUORA _9281 |
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_aHAUORA TAIHEMAHEMA _96927 |
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_aHEALTH _9283 |
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_aLGBTQIA+ _93453 |
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_aPREGNANCY _9455 |
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_aREPRODUCTIVE HEALTH _93274 |
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_aTAKATĀPUI _94978 |
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_aTRANSGENDER _93315 |
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_aNEW ZEALAND _92588 |
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_aKerekere, Elizabeth _95448 |
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_aMiller, Suzanne _913807 |
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_aBaddock, Sally _913808 |
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_aVeale, Jaimie _98626 |
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_aKelsey, Fleur _913809 |
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_aKer, Alex _911737 |
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773 | 0 | _tInternational Journal of Transgender Health, 2025, First published online, 8 March 2025 | |
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_aInternational Journal of Transgender Health _911657 |
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_zdoi: 10.1080/26895269.2025.2476231 (Open access) _uhttps://doi.org/10.1080/26895269.2025.2476231 |
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_2ddc _cARTICLE _hnews132 |