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An address to British females on the moral management of pregnancy and labour, and some cursory observations on medical deportment cover

An address to British females on the moral management of pregnancy and labour, and some cursory observations on medical deportment

Chapter 2: Author William Cooke
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About This Book

A surgeon-obstetrician reflects on public grief after a notable maternal death and offers practical counsel to pregnant women and their attendants. He urges tempering excessive fear, promoting moral and psychological support during pregnancy and labour, and combining compassionate guidance with prudent medical care. The pamphlet critiques overreliance on drugs and empirical fads while defending the conduct of certain attending physicians, and recommends cooperation between clergy and medical practitioners to soothe anxieties. Short, exhortatory sections mix ethical admonition, medical opinion, and practical suggestions intended to encourage calmer, safer childbirth and more conscientious professional behaviour.

AN ADDRESS

TO

BRITISH FEMALES

ON

THE MORAL MANAGEMENT

OF

PREGNANCY AND LABOUR,

AND SOME CURSORY

OBSERVATIONS ON MEDICAL DEPORTMENT.

SUGGESTED BY

The Death

OF HER ROYAL HIGHNESS PRINCESS

CHARLOTTE AUGUSTA OF WALES.


WITH
A VINDICATION
OF
HER ROYAL HIGHNESS’S PHYSICIANS,

SIR RICHARD CROFT,
DR. BAILLIE, AND DR. SIMS.


SURGEON-ACCOUCHEUR.


“To enjoy Happiness is a great blessing:—to confer it, a greater.”


LONDON:
PRINTED FOR E. COX AND SON,
ST. THOMAS’S STREET, BOROUGH.


1817.