Caesarean-sections in the Press: the said and the not said.
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1.
Rocha TA, Abib GM de C, Armellini CJ, Martini JG, Bonilha AL de L. Caesarean-sections in the Press: the said and the not said. Online Braz J Nurs [Internet]. 22º de abril de 2006 [citado 8º de fevereiro de 2026];5(1). Disponível em: https://objnursing.uff.br/nursing/article/view/133

Resumo

This paper aimed at knowing the cultural caesarean representations present in magazines addressed to the laic public. One of the attributions of the nurse is health education. The press is source of informal education. So, the nurse must provide women with subsidies so that they can make decisions with autonomy and knowledge, demystifying or incrementing what is thought about the surgical delivery. Upon analyzing editions of Revista Crescer, two themes have arisen: the “said” and the “not said” about caesarean. Regarding the “said” category, the articles appraise pathologies in the gestation and their inter-occurrences with explicit association between pathologies and the caesarean; the magazine searched for the adequacy of the woman to the hospital routine and softened the caesarean consequences. As to the “not said” category, the magazine did not emphasize the control and prevention of the complications that are inherent to pregnancy and, somehow, led women to opt for the caesarean as the safest mode of delivery.
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