Articles
An Anthropological Perspective on the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: The Neurological and Structural Bases of Speech Breathing and Why SIDS Appears to Be a Species-Specific Malady, Part II
This paper extends the evolutionary-based arguments proposed in a previous paper (see McKenna 1987, Part I) but concentrates on why
The Power of Joy: Pre- and Peri-Natal Psychology as Applied by a Mountain Midwife
Knowledge of the consciousness of the unborn child provides the unprecedented opportunity and responsibility to change the practice of obstetrics.
Tess: The Emotional and physiological Effects of Prental Physical Trauma
This paper will present a verbatim account of an abreaction t the prenntal trauma of blow to mother;s abdomen with
The Influence of Mother-Daughter Communications on Anxiety During Labor
Clinical observations of the behavior of labor patients and their families along with the recognition of the unique aspects of