Publication Cover
Human Fertility
an international, multidisciplinary journal dedicated to furthering research and promoting good practice
Volume 15, 2012 - Issue 1
431
Views
11
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Infertility and Poverty

The link between infertility and poverty: Evidence from Bangladesh

Pages 18-26 | Received 04 Sep 2010, Accepted 16 Sep 2011, Published online: 08 Feb 2012

References

  • Aassve, A., Engelhardt, H., Francavilla, F., Kedir, A., Kim, J., Mealli, F., et al. (2005). Poverty and fertility in less developed countries: a comparative analysis. Working paper-13, Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex (ISER). Available at: http://www.iser.essex.ac.uk/files/iser_working_papers/2005-13.pdf
  • Abdullah, A. A. (2002). Social change and ‘modernisation’. In: Jahan, R. (Ed), Bangladesh: promise and performance. Dhaka: University Press Limited, p 129–148.
  • Ahmad, A. (1991). Women and fertility in bangladesh. New Delhi, London: Sage Publications.
  • Akande, E. O. (2008). Affordable assisted reproductive technologies in developing countries pros and cons. Human reproduction [doi:10.1093/humrep/den147], published by Oxford University press. (pp. 12–14). www.eshremonographs.oupjournals.org ISSN 0268-1161.
  • Arens, J., & van Beurden, J. (1980). Jhagrapur: poor peasants and women in a village in Bangladesh. Kolkata: Orient Longman.
  • Attig, G. A. (1993). Participant observation and in-depth interviewing. In: Atttig, B.Y., et al., Qualitative methods for population and health research.Thailand: Mahidul University, p 146–172.
  • de Kok, B., Hussein, J., & Jeffery, P. (2010). Joining-up thinking: loss in childbearing from inter-disciplinary perspectives. Introduction. Social science & medicine (1982), 71, 1703–1710.
  • Bergström, S. (1992). Reproductive failure as a health priority in the Third World: a review. East African medical journal, 69, 174–180.
  • Bhatti, L. I., Fikree, F. F., & Khan, A. (1999). The quest of infertile women in squatter settlements of Karachi, Pakistan: a qualitative study. Social science & medicine (1982), 49, 637–649.
  • Biernacki, P., & Waldorf, D. (1981). Snowball sampling: problem and techniques of chain referral sampling. Sociological methods and research, 10, 141–163.
  • Blanchet, T. (1984). Women, pollution and marginality: meanings and rituals of birth in rural Bangladesh. Dhaka: University Press Limited.
  • Bury, M. (1982). Chronic illness as biographical disruption. Sociology of health & illness, 4, 167–182.
  • Colen, S. (1995). “Like a mother to them”: stratified reproduction and West Indian childcare workers and employers in New York. In: Ginsburg, F. D., Rapp R. (Eds), Conceiving the new world order. Berkeley: University of California Press: 78–102.
  • Culley, L. A., Hudson, N., Rapport, F. L., Katbamna, S., & Johnson, M. R. (2006). British South Asian communities and infertility services. Human fertility (Cambridge, England), 9, 37–45.
  • Daar A. S., & Merali, Z. (2002). Infertility and social suffering: the case of ART in developing countries. In: Vayena, E., Rowe, P. J., Griffin, P. D. (Eds), Current practices and controversies in assisted reproduction: report of a WHO meeting. Geneva: WHO: 15–21.
  • Edgeworth, R. & Collins, A. E. (2006). Self-care as a response to diarrhoea in rural Bangladesh: empowered choice or enforced adoption? Social science & medicine (1982), 63, 2686–2697.
  • Edouard, L. & Olatunbosun, O. A. (1997). The case against new reproductive technologies in developing countries. British journal of obstetrics and gynaecology, 104, 969; author reply 969–969; author reply 970.
  • Egerö, B. (1996). Poverty and fertility: reproductive change under persistent poverty. Year book of population research in Finland, 33, 218–242.
  • Elahi, K. M. (2001). Drought in Bangladesh: a study of North-West Bangladesh. In: Nizamuddin K. (Ed), Disaster in Bangladesh: selected readings. Dhaka: Disaster Research Training and Management Centre (DRTMC).
  • Evans, T., Whitehead, M., Diderichsen, F., Bhuiya, A., & Wirth, M. (2001). Challenging inequities in health. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Ford Foundation Product. (2003). Women’s health research manual. Delhi (India), granted through the department of international health, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. Web: www.unu.edu.inupress/foo2/UIN01E/uin01e01.htm (Accessed March 14 2003).
  • Forrest, L., & Gilbert, L. G. (1992). Infertility: an unanticipated and prolonged life crisis. Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 14, 42–58.
  • Gardner, K. (1991). Songs at the river edge: Stories from a Bangladeshi village. London: Virago.
  • Gerrits, T. (1997). Social and cultural aspects of infertility in Mozambique. Patient education and counseling, 31, 39–48.
  • Gerrits, T., Pimpawun, B., Feresu, S., & Halperin, D. (1999). Involuntary infertility and childlessness in resource-poor countries. Gender, reproductive health and population policy project series. Amsterdam: Het Spinhuis.
  • Ginsburg, F. D., & Rapp, D., Eds. (1995). Conceiving the new world order. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Greil, A. L., Porter, K. L., & Thomas, A. L. (1989). Sex and intimacy among infertile couples. Journal of Psychology and Human Sexuality, 2, 117–138.
  • Greil, A. L. (1991). Not yet pregnant: Infertile couple’s contemporary America. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
  • Greil, A. L. (1997). Infertility and psychological distress: a critical review of the literature. Social science & medicine (1982), 45, 1679–1704.
  • Gupta, J. (2000). New reproductive technologies, women’s health and autonomy: freedom or dependency? New Delhi: Sage.
  • Gupta, J. A. (2005). Local articulation of globalized assisted reproduction technologies in the socio-cultural context of India. In: Pati R. N., Pati N. K. (Eds), Population challenges and health needs in Orissa. Orissa: The Home of Letters Press, p 155–171.
  • Hartman, B., & Boyce, J. K. (1983). A quiet violence: view from a Bangladeshi village. London: Zed Press.
  • Inhorn, M. C. (1994). Quest for conception: gender, infertility, and Egyptian medical traditions. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Inhorn, M. C. (1996). Infertility and patriarchy: the cultural politics of gender and family life in Egypt. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Inhorn, C. M., & Van Balen, F. (2002). Introduction. Interpreting infertility: a view from the social sciences. In: Van Balen, F., Inhorn M. C. (Eds), Infertility around the globe: new thinking on childlessness, gender, and reproductive technologies. Berkeley: University of California Press, p 3–33.
  • Jejeebhoy, S. (1998). Infertility in India − levels, patterns and consequences: Priorities for social science research. Journal of Family Welfare, 44, 15–24.
  • Johnson, J. L. (1997). Generalizibility in qualitative research: Excavating the discourse. In J. M. Morse (Ed.), Completing a qualitative project. London: Sage.
  • Khan, A. A. (2001). Discovery of Bangladesh: Exploration into Dynamics of a Hidden Nation. Dhaka: University Press Limited.
  • Kleinman, A., Kleinman, J. (1998). Suffering and its professional transformation: Toward an ethnography of interpersonal experience. In Van der Geest, S. & A., Rienks (Eds.), The Art of Medical Anthropology: Readings (pp. 199–214). Amsterdam: HetSpinhuis.
  • Koster-Oyekan, W. (1999). Infertility among Yoruba women: Perceptions on causes, reatments and consequences. African Journal of Reproductive Health, 3, 13–26.
  • Kotalova, J. (1996). Belonging to Others: Cultural Construction of Womanhood in a Village in Bangladesh. Dhaka: University Press Limited.
  • Maskrey, A. (1989). Disaster Mitigation: A community Based Approach. Oxford: Oxfam.
  • NaharNahar, P., Sharma, A., Sabin, K., Begum, L., Ahsan, S. K., & Baqui, A. H. (2000). Living with infertility: experiences among Urban slum populations in Bangladesh. Reproductive health matters, 8, 33–44.
  • Nahar, P. (2010a). Health seeking behaviour of childless women in Bangladesh: an ethnographic exploration for the special issue on: loss in child bearing. Social science & medicine (1982), 71, 1780–1787.
  • Nahar, P. (2010b). Mystery of empty laps: Life of childless women in Bangladesh. Facts, Views & Vision; in Obgyn: Issues in Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Health, July, Monograph; 28–34. Belgium: Universa Press.
  • Nahar, P. (2010c). Violence against Childless women. In Bolaiah Donta et al. (eds) Gender based violence and sexual and reproductive health. National Institute for research in reproductive health, World Health Organisation, and Indian Society for the Reproduction and Fertility, ISBN 978-81-910540-1-9, Mumbai, 400012, India. pp.11–30
  • Nahar, P. & Richters, A. (2011). Suffering of childless women in Bangladesh: the intersection of social identities of gender and class. Anthropology & medicine, 18, 327–338.
  • Nahar P. (2011d). Understanding the stigma of childlessness through the meaning of mandatory motherhood. In Tankink & Vysma (eds). Roads and Boundaries: Travels in search of (re-)connection. AMB Publishers. Diemen, The Netherlands. 132–141.
  • Nahar P. (2012a) Understanding motherhood from non-mothers: Value of children from the perspectives of childless women in Bangladesh. (Paper in progress).
  • Nahar P. (2012b). The Invisible Women of Bangladesh: Infertility Policy and Programmes. Health Policy and Planning (Under review).
  • Ombelet, W. (2009). Reproductive healthcare systems should include accessible infertility diagnosis and treatment: an important challenge for resource-poor countries. International journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, 106, 168–171.
  • Patton, M. Q. (2002). Qualitative Research and Evaluation Methods. London: Sage.
  • Pearce, T. O. (1999). She will not be listened to in public: Perception among the Yoruba of infertility and childlessness in women. Reproductive Health Matters, 7, 69–79.
  • Perry, H. B. (2000). Health for All in Bangladesh: Lessons in Primary Health Care for the Twenty-first Century. Dhaka: University Press Limited.
  • Reid, C. (2004). The Wounds of Exclusion: Poverty, Women’s Health and Social Justice. Edmonton, Elberta: Qual Institute Press.
  • Roudsari, R. L., Allan, H. T., & Smith, P.A. (2007). Looking at infertility through the lens of religion and spirituality: a review of the literature. Human fertility (Cambridge, England), 10, 141–149.
  • Rowe, P. J. (1999). Clinical aspects of infertility and the role of health care service. Reproductive Health Matters, 7, 103–111.
  • Rowland, R. (1992). Living Laboratories: Women and Reproductive Technology. Melbourne: Pan Macmillan Publishers.
  • Russo, N. F. (1976). The motherhood mandate. Journal of Social Issues, 32, 143–153.
  • Sandelowski, M. (1991). Compelled to try: The never-enough quality of connective technology. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 5, 29–47.
  • Schoumaker, B. & Tabutin, D. (1999). “Relations entre pauvreté et fécondité dans les pays du Sud”. Document de travail 2, Louvain-la -Neuve: Département des sciences de la population et du développement.
  • Schur, E. M. (1984). Labelling Women Deviant: Gender, Stigma, and Social Control. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Sen, A. (1994). Freedoms and needs. The New Republic January, 10, 31–32.
  • Silverman, D. (1993). Interpreting Qualitative Data. London: Sage.
  • Singhi, N.K. (1996). Gender theme: Issues and perspectives. In Pratibha, J. & M. Rajan (Eds.), Women Images (pp. 54–71). Jaipur, New Delhi: Rawat Publications.
  • Storeng, K. T., Baggaley, R. F., Ganaba, R., Ouattara, F., Akoum, M. S., & Filippi, V. (2008). Paying the price: the cost and consequences of emergency obstetric care in Burkina Faso. Social science & medicine (1982), 66, 545–557.
  • Togunde, D. & Newman, S. (2005). Value of Children, Child Labor, and Fertility Preferences in Urban Nigeria. West Africa Review, 7, 1–25.
  • Thompson, C. (1992). Managing acute pancreatitis. RN, 55, 52–56.
  • Unnithan-Kumar, M. (2001). Emotion, Agency and Access to Healthcare: Women’s Experiences of Reproduction in Jaipur. In Soraya Tremayne (ed.) Managing Reproductive life. Cross-cultural themes in fertility and sexuality (pp. 27–51). Oxford: Berghahn books.
  • Widge, A. (2001). “Socio-cultural attitudes towards infertility and assisted reproduction in India” Current Practices and Controversies in Assisted Reproduction Report. World
  • Health Organization (WHO), Geneva, Switzerland, p: 74.
  • William, S. M. (2002). Generalization in interpretative research In T., May (Ed.), Qualitative research in action. London: Sage.
  • White, S. C. (1992). Arguing with the Crocodile: Gender and Class in Bangladesh. Dhaka: University Press Limited
  • Whiteford, L. M. & Gonzalez, L. (1995). Stigma: the hidden burden of infertility. Social science & medicine (1982), 40, 27–36.
  • WHSEA (Women’s Health in South-East Asia). (2002). Women for women Bangladesh. Am I pregnant? Available at: www.am-I-pregnant.com/ aip.article/0/178626. Accessed 23 October, 2002.
  • WHO Report, (2004). World Health Organization Geneva, Switzerland.
  • World Bank. (1984). Population Change and Economic Development. The World Bank, Washington D.C, USA.
  • Zaman, S. (2005). Broken limbs, broken lives: Ethnography of a hospital ward in Bangladesh. Amsterdam: Het Spinhuis.
  • Zulfiquer, M. H. (2004). Country paper on child labour. Available at: www.cwa.tnet.co.th/booklet/Contents.htm Accessed 4 November, 2004.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.