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Introductory notes on lying-in institutions

Chapter 5: NOTES ON LYING-IN INSTITUTIONS.
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The author analyzes maternal mortality in maternity hospitals and wards, compiling statistics on deaths from puerperal fever, peritonitis, pyæmia, haemorrhage, and other causes. Comparisons are drawn between hospital, workhouse, and home birth death-rates to estimate a baseline risk and to highlight higher institutional mortality in some settings. She investigates institutional contributors to infection such as crowding, poor ventilation, mixed wards, and attendants serving diverse classes of patients, and recounts a midwifery ward outbreak that led to closure. Practical proposals are advanced for building arrangements, infection control, and the organized training of midwives and midwifery nurses to reduce maternal deaths.

NOTES ON LYING-IN INSTITUTIONS.

The first step to be taken in the discussion is to enquire, What is the real normal death-rate of lying-in women? And, having ascertained this to the extent which existing data may enable us to do, we must compare this death-rate with the rates occurring in establishments into which parturition cases are received in numbers. We have then to classify the causes of death, so far as we can, from the data, with the view of ascertaining whether any particular cause of death predominates in lying-in institutions; and, if so, why so? And finally, seeing that everybody must be born, that every birth in civilised countries is as a rule attended by somebody, and ought to be by a skilled attendant; since, therefore, the attendance upon lying-in women is the widest practice in the world, and these attendants should be trained; we must decide the great question as to whether a training school for midwifery nurses can be safely conducted in any building receiving a number of parturition cases, or whether such nurses must be only trained at the bedside in the patient’s own home, with far more difficulty and far less chance of success.