1.Hussein SAAA, Dahlen HG, Duff M, Schmied V: The barriers and facilitators to evidence-based episiotomy practice in Jordan. Women and Birth 2016, 29(4):321–329.
2.Hatamleh R, Sinclair M, Kernohan G, Bunting B: Birth memories of Jordanian women: findings from qualitative data. Journal of Research in Nursing 2013, 18(3):235–244.
3.Mohammad K, Alafi K, Mohammad A, Gamble J, Creedy D: Jordanian women’s dissatisfaction with childbirth care. International nursing review 2014, 61(2):278–284.
4.Oweis A: Jordanian mother’s report of their childbirth experience: findings from a questionnaire survey. International journal of nursing practice 2009, 15(6):525–533.
5.Jahlan I, Plummer V, McIntyre M: What women have to say about giving birth in Saudi Arabia. Middle East Journal of Nursing 2016, 10(1):10–18.
6.Hussein SA, Dahlen HG, Ogunsiji O, Schmied V: Women’s experiences of childbirth in Middle Eastern countries: A narrative review. Midwifery 2018, 59:100–111.
7.El-Nemer A, Downe S, Small N: ‘She would help me from the heart’: an ethnography of Egyptian women in labour. Social science & medicine 2006, 62(1):81–92.
8.Bohren MA, Vogel JP, Hunter EC, Lutsiv O, Makh SK, Souza JP, Aguiar C, Coneglian FS, Diniz ALA, Tunçalp Ö: The mistreatment of women during childbirth in health facilities globally: a mixed-methods systematic review. PLoS Med 2015, 12(6):e1001847.
9.Hulton LA, Matthews Z, Stones RW: Applying a framework for assessing the quality of maternal health services in urban India. Social science & medicine 2007, 64(10):2083–2095.
10.Miller S, Abalos E, Chamillard M, Ciapponi A, Colaci D, Comandé D, Diaz V, Geller S, Hanson C, Langer A: Beyond too little, too late and too much, too soon: a pathway towards evidence-based, respectful maternity care worldwide. The Lancet 2016, 388(10056):2176–2192.
11.World Health Organization.: World health statistics 2010. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2010.
12.World Health Organization.: The prevention and elimination of disrespect and abuse during facility-based childbirth: WHO Statement. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2014.
13.Keedle H, Schmied V, Burns E, Dahlen HG: Women’s reasons for, and experiences of, choosing a homebirth following a caesarean section. BMC pregnancy and childbirth 2015, 15(1):1.
14.Rigg EC, Schmied V, Peters K, Dahlen HG: Why do women choose an unregulated birth worker to birth at home in Australia: a qualitative study. BMC pregnancy and childbirth 2017, 17(1):1–14.
15.Elmir R, Schmied V, Wilkes L, Jackson D: Women’s perceptions and experiences of a traumatic birth: a meta‐ethnography. Journal of advanced nursing 2010, 66(10):2142–2153.
16.Bernhard C, Zielinski R, Ackerson K, English J: Home birth after hospital birth: women’s choices and reflections. Journal of midwifery & women’s health 2014, 59(2):160–166.
17.Rigg E, Schmied V, Peters K, Dahlen H: Not addressing the root cause: An analysis of submissions made to the South Australian Government on a Proposal to Protect Midwifery Practice. Women and Birth 2015, 28(2):121–128.
18.Safadi R: Jordanian women: Perceptions and practices of first‐time pregnancy. International Journal of Nursing Practice 2005, 11(6):269–276.
19.Shaban IA: Midwifery: contemporary issues in Jordan. 2006.
20.Basu S, Andrews J, Kishore S, Panjabi R, Stuckler D: Comparative performance of private and public healthcare systems in low-and middle-income countries: a systematic review. PLoS medicine 2012, 9(6):e1001244.
21.Sengupta A, Nundy S: The private health sector in India. In.: British Medical Journal Publishing Group; 2005.
22.Lupton D: Medicine as culture: illness, disease and the body, 3rd edn. CA, US: SAGE Publications Ltd; 2012.
23.Luce A, Cash M, Hundley V, Cheyne H, Van Teijlingen E, Angell C: “Is it realistic?” the portrayal of pregnancy and childbirth in the media. BMC pregnancy and childbirth 2016, 16(1):40.
24.Prosen M, Krajnc MT: Perspectives and experiences of healthcare professionals regarding the medicalisation of pregnancy and childbirth. Women and Birth 2018.
25.Pazandeh F, Potrata B, Huss R, Hirst J, House A: Women’s experiences of routine care during labour and childbirth and the influence of medicalisation: A qualitative study from Iran. Midwifery 2017, 53:63–70.
26.Fahy KM, Parratt JA: Birth territory: a theory for midwifery practice. Women and Birth 2006, 19(2):45–50.
27.Ackerly B, True J: Doing feminist research in political and social science: Palgrave Macmillan; 2010.
28.Pitre NY, Kushner KE, Raine KD, Hegadoren KM: Critical feminist narrative inquiry: Advancing knowledge through double-hermeneutic narrative analysis. Advances in Nursing Science 2013, 36(2):118–132.
29.Doucet A, Mauthner N: Qualitative interviewing and feminist research. The SAGE handbook of social research methods 2008:328–343.
30.Ramazanoglu C, Holland J: Feminist methodology: Challenges and choices: Sage; 2002.
31.Braun V, Clarke V, Terry G: Thematic analysis. Qual Res Clin Health Psychol 2014, 24:95–114.
32.Schleifer A: Motherhood in Islam. 1996.
33.Pappano MA, Olwan DM: Muslim Mothering: Global Histories, Theories, and Practices. Canada: Demeter Press, Bradford, ON, Canada; 2016.
34.Cheruvallil-Contractor S: Motherhood as Constructed by Us: Muslim Women’s Negotiations from a Space That Is Their Own. Religion and Gender 2016, 6(1).
35.Ehrenreich B, English D: For her own good: Two centuries of the experts’ advice to women: Anchor; 2005.
36.Dahlen H, Homer C, Leap N, Tracy SK: From social to surgical: Historical perspectives on perineal care during labour and birth. Women and Birth 2011, 24(3):105–111.
37.Cahill HA: Male appropriation and medicalization of childbirth: An historical analysis. Journal of Advanced Nursing 2001, 33(3):334–342.
38.Henley-Einion A: The medicalisation of childbirth. The social context of birth 2003:173–185.
39.Davis-Floyd R, Sargent CF: Childbirth and authoritative knowledge: Cross-cultural perspectives, 1st edn: University of California Press; 1997.
40.Jordan B: Authoritative knowledge and its construction. Childbirth and authoritative knowledge: Cross-cultural perspectives 1997:55–79.
41.Cindoglu D, Sayan-Cengiz F: Medicalization discourse and modernity: contested meanings over childbirth in contemporary Turkey. Health Care for Women International 2010, 31(3):221–243.
42.Sultan F: Nursing in Jordan: Start, development and aspirations. Sultan Graphics Centre for design and printing 1998.
43.Logsdon K, Smith-Morris C: An ethnography on perceptions of pain in Dutch “Natural” childbirth. Midwifery 2017, 55:67–74.
44.Kaartinen L, Diwan V: Mother and child health care in Kabul, Afghanistan with focus on the mother: women’s own perspective. Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica 2002, 81(6):491–501.
45.Kabakian-Khasholian T, Campbell O, Shediac-Rizkallah M, Ghorayeb F: Women’s experiences of maternity care: satisfaction or passivity? Social science & medicine 2000, 51(1):103–113.
46.Scarf VL, Rossiter C, Vedam S, Dahlen HG, Ellwood D, Forster D, Foureur MJ, McLachlan H, Oats J, Sibbritt D: Maternal and perinatal outcomes by planned place of birth among women with low-risk pregnancies in high-income countries: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Midwifery 2018, 62:240–255.
47.Olsen O, Clausen JA: Planned hospital birth versus planned home birth. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2012(9).
48.Aliyev N, Roldan C, Cakmak B: The rising home birth trend in America. Int J Reprod Contracept Obstet Gynecol 2017, 4(6):1669–1671.
49.Skowronski G: Pain relief in childbirth: changing historical and feminist perspectives. Anaesthesia and intensive care 2015, 43(1_suppl):25–28.
50.Rosen R: The world split open: How the modern women’s movement changed America: Tantor eBooks; 2013.
51.Yllö KE, Bograd ME: Feminist perspectives on wife abuse. In: National Conference for Family Violence Researchers, 2nd, 1984, U of New Hampshire, NH, US: 1988: Sage Publications, Inc; 1988.
52.Binion G: Human rights: A feminist perspective. Hum Rts Q 1995, 17:509.
53.Debenham C: Birth control and the rights of women: Post-suffrage feminism in the early twentieth century, vol. 31: IB Tauris; 2013.
54.Schick VR, Zucker AN, Bay-Cheng LY: Safer, better sex through feminism: The role of feminist ideology in women’s sexual well-being. Psychology of Women Quarterly 2008, 32(3):225–232.
55.Allen A: Feminism and motherhood in Western Europe, 1890–1970: The maternal dilemma: Springer; 2005.
56.Snitow A: Feminism and motherhood: An American reading. Feminist Review 1992, 40(1):32–51.
57.Betty F, Fermaglich KL, Fine LM: The feminine mystique, A Norton Critical ed. edn. New York: New York: W. W. Norton; 2013.
58.Leap N, Sandall J, Buckland S, Huber U: Journey to confidence: women’s experiences of pain in labour and relational continuity of care. Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health 2010, 55(3):234–242.
59.Walsh D, Newburn M: Towards a social model of childbirth: part one. In.: MA Healthcare London; 2002.
60.Odent M: Birth and Breastfeeding: Rediscovering the Needs of Women during Pregnancy and Childbirth. Russet. In.: United Kingdom: Clairview Books; 2003.
61.Walsh D: Evidence and skills for normal labour and birth: a guide for midwives: Routledge; 2011.
62.Abushaikha L: Midwifery education in Jordan: History, challenges and proposed solutions. Journal of International Women’s Studies 2006, 8:185.
63.Khalaf I, Callister LC: Cultural meanings of childbirth: Muslim women living in Jordan. Journal of Holistic Nursing 1997, 15(4):373–388.
64.Leap N, Hunter B: Supporting women for labour and birth: a thoughtful guide: Routledge; 2016.
65.Stenglin M, Foureur M: Designing out the Fear Cascade to increase the likelihood of normal birth. Midwifery 2013, 29(8):819–825.
66.Sandall J, Soltani H, Gates S, Shennan A, Devane D: Midwife-led continuity models versus other models of care for childbearing women. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2015, 9.
67.Wharton E: Twilight Sleep. New York: SCRIBNER PAPERBACK FICTION. Simon and Schuster Inc.; 2012.
68.Jenkinson B, Josey N, Kruske S: BirthSpace: An evidence-based guide to birth environment design. 2014.
69.Foureur M, Davis D, Fenwick J, Leap N, Iedema R, Forbes I, Homer CS: The relationship between birth unit design and safe, satisfying birth: developing a hypothetical model. Midwifery 2010, 26(5):520–525.
70.Afsana K, Rashid SF: The challenges of meeting rural Bangladeshi women’s needs in delivery care. Reproductive health matters 2001, 9(18):79–89.
71.Øxnevad M: Perceptions and practices related to home based and facility based birth. A Qualitative Study from Agemssa 2011.
72.Christiaens W, Bracke P: Assessment of social psychological determinants of satisfaction with childbirth in a cross-national perspective. BMC pregnancy and childbirth 2007, 7(1):26.
73.Mosallam M, Rizk DE, Thomas L, Ezimokhai M: Women’s attitudes towards psychosocial support in labour in United Arab Emirates. Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics 2004, 269(3):181–187.
74.Hodnett ED, Gates S, Hofmeyr GJ, Sakala C: Continuous support for women during childbirth. Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2013(7).
75.Hassan-Bitar S, Wick L: Evoking the guardian angel: childbirth care in a Palestinian hospital. Reproductive Health Matters 2007, 15(30):103–113.
76.Kabakian‐Khasholian T, El‐Nemer A, Bashour H: Perceptions about labor companionship at public teaching hospitals in three Arab countries. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics 2015, 129(3):223–226.
77.Khresheh R: Support in the first stage of labour from a female relative: the first step in improving the quality of maternity services. Midwifery 2010, 26(6):e21-e24.
78.Jallow IK, Chou Y-J, Liu T-L, Huang N: Women’s perception of antenatal care services in public and private clinics in the Gambia. International journal for quality in health care 2012, 24(6):595–600.
79.Tetui M, Ekirapa EK, Bua J, Mutebi A: Quality of Antenatal care services in eastern Uganda: implications for interventions. Pan African Medical Journal 2012, 13(1).
80.Hasan A: Patients Satisfaction with Maternal and Child Health Services Among Mothers Attending the Maternal and Child Health Training Institute in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Mahidol University; 2007.
81.George A: Quality of reproductive care in private hospitals in Andhra Pradesh: Women’s perception. Economic and Political Weekly 2002:1686–1692.
82.Simbar M, Ghafari F, Tork Zahrani S, Alavi Majd H: Assessment of quality of midwifery care in labour and delivery wards of selected Kordestan Medical Science University hospitals. International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance 2009, 22(3):266–277.
83.Melese T, Gebrehiwot Y, Bisetegne D, Habte D: Assessment of client satisfaction in labor and delivery services at a maternity referral hospital in Ethiopia. The Pan African medical journal 2014, 17.
84.Oweis A, Abushaikha L: Jordanian pregnant women’s expectations of their first childbirth experience. International Journal of Nursing Practice 2004, 10(6):264–271.
85.Kridli SA-O, Ilori OM, Goeth J: Health beliefs and practices of Qatari women: A qualitative study. Avicenna 2012(2012):1.