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Introductory 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.

About the Author

Nightingale, Florence portrait

Florence Nightingale

Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) was a pioneering figure in nursing and healthcare reform, known for her foundational work in establishing nursing as a respected profession for women. She gained prominence during the Crimean War, where her efforts to improve sanitary conditions in military hospitals significantly reduced the death rate. Nightingale authored several influential texts, including "Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not," which provided essential guidelines for nursing practice and patient care. Her commitment to health statistics and sanitation laid the groundwork for modern nursing and public health initiatives, making her a key figure in the history of medicine.

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