"Maraesa's vivid account of reproductive care practices in the southern region of Belize is a page turner. In what some might characterize as a sleepy and remote Caribbean outpost, removed from the Belizean government and NGOs' numerical goals for improving infant and maternal mortality, pregnant women and their families actively engage a wealth of ideas, practices, and beliefs for navigating pregnancy and childbirth, as well as the social norms governing acceptable and unacceptable uses of sexuality, spiritual practice, biomedical knowledge, and norms of behavior. With Maraesa as our conflicted, astute, compassionate, and sometimes barefoot guide, we find a path in the forest created by the jumble of underfunded and poorly implemented public health mandates and complicated social relations, and may wind up questioning what we thought we knew about the promotion of maternal and infant health in marginalized communities." -- Alyshia Gálvez , author of Patient Citizens, Immigrant Mothers: Mexican Women, Public Prenatal Care, and the Birth Weight Paradox.
Good Position for Birth : Pregnancy, Risk, and Development in Southern Belize