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The married woman's private medical companion

Chapter 67: TREATMENT AFTER DELIVERY.
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About This Book

A practical medical handbook provides plain-language guidance for reproductive and maternal health, explaining menstrual physiology and common disorders with their causes, symptoms, and treatments. It outlines how pregnancy may be recognized, common ailments and discomforts during gestation, complications of labor, and both natural and assisted delivery techniques, together with postpartum care and nursing. The manual addresses miscarriage and abortion, distinguishing causes, risks, prevention, and when intervention is considered, and examines sterility, its possible origins, and available remedies. It also discusses methods proposed to prevent conception, attendant moral and practical considerations, and practical advice for infant care and management.

TREATMENT AFTER DELIVERY.

After-pains.—Soon after delivery these usually come on, and with some women prove remarkably severe. The quicker the labor has been, the slighter will they prove in general. Women with their first child are seldom much troubled with after-pains; but as the uterus is thought to contract less readily after each future labor, so they are more liable to suffer from them in any succeeding delivery than in the first.

When after-pains prove so troublesome as to deprive the patient of her rest, it will be necessary to have recourse to fomentations or anodynes; red pepper and spirits, simmered together a few minutes, and flannels dipped in it and applied to the belly, will generally relieve them; if it fails, apply a fomentation of bitter herbs, and give two teaspoonfuls of the tincture of hops in milk or tea. If these fail, which I never knew, give half a teaspoonful of capsicum in milk. These remedies are to be assisted by keeping up a sufficient pressure on the belly at the same time by means of a broad bandage.