Objective: To discuss the concept of 'transcendent birth', an as yet poorly articulated and under recognised psychosocial wellness phenomenon of childbirth.
Design: an auto-ethnographical examination of the primary authors' journaled experiences as a student midwife and childbearing woman.
Setting: three maternity care units in South Eastern Australia as well as the home of the primary author.
Findings: The phenomenon of transcendent birth is linked with physiologic birth. Maternity care can hinder or facilitate physiologic birth, and therefore transcendent birth.
Key conclusions: Transcendent birth is more likely in maternity care models which value the childbearing woman and physiologic birth.
Implications for practice: Women's access to transcendent birth is demarcated by women's position in society, cultural knowledge of transcendent birth and the valuing of transcendent birth as a maternity care outcome.
Keywords: Auto-ethnography; Childbirth; Maternity care; Natural birth; Physiologic birth; Psychosocial wellbeing.
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