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Wills J, Marshall JE and Raynor MD (2010) Forceps-assisted births. In Marshall JE and Raynor MD (2010) Advancing Skills in Midwifery Practice, Edinburgh: Elsevier, Churchill Livingstone, Chapter 8, pp 77-87. Hussain CJ and Marshall JE (2011) The effect of the developing role of the maternity support worker on the professional accountability of the midwife, Midwifery, 27 (3), pp 336-341. Ledward A and Marshall JE (2020) Care of the dying baby: End of life issues and the rights of the fetus/neonate. In Marshall JE and Raynor MD (2020) Myles Textbook for Midwives (17th ed), Edinburgh, Elsevier, pp 955-969. Building a skilled Midwifery Education Workforce for the 21 st century and beyond workshop, on behalf of the Education Standing Committee: 32 nd Triennial Congress of the International Confederation of Midwives Online, 23 June 2021.
Guidance to support the trend for midwives to undertake the neonatal physical examination of the healthy term infantYep, the series was great (though is it just me or has it got a bit wonky now?) but the book is even better. Jennifer Worth was a very interesting midwife author. Did you know she was also a musician? Her children say she was physically clumsy. She married an artist. She was ballsy, and wise, and had an intuitive grasp of how to care for women and babies.
Price, JE, Mendizabel-Espinosa, R, Podsiadly E, Marshall-Lucette S and Marshall JE (2019) Perinatal/ neonatal palliative care: Effecting improved knowledge and multi-professional practice of midwifery and children’s nursing students through an inter-professional education initiative, Nurse Education in Practice, 40, pp 1-9. Anything by Michel Odent islikely to change the way you think about pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period, in a really good way. You can often find huge sections of midwifery books for free. Insights even from sections of these books can be invaluable in shaping your practice.Marshall JE (2021) Developing a virtual Mentoring Scheme for the UK Lead Midwives for Education, 8 th Annual Royal College of Midwives Education Conference: Resetting Midwifery Education (virtual), 16 March 2021. Margaret (Maggie) Fraser Myles, née Findlay, (December 1892 - February 1988) [1] was a Scottish midwife, midwifery tutor and lecturer and author. She is globally known for her Textbook for Midwives, first published in 1953, which has been considered a reference midwifery textbook for decades. Also, reading has always been the perfect act of rebellion. Books pass knowledge along in a powerful but quiet way.