Wednesday 20 November 2013

CHILDBIRTH PRACTICES IN HISTORY

Child-bearing, always accepted as a natural process, tended to be treated with dispassion but also brutality. At the height of early civilisations – Egyptian then the Greek and Roman civilisations - methods of caring for the child-bearing woman were well developed. However, with the decline of the Greek and Roman civilisations the care of women deteriorated and the practices developed by the Greeks were not heeded in Europe. Procedures in childbirth did not recover until the sixteenth or seventeenth century.


METHODS OF HASTENING LABOUR



Among the Greeks at the time of Hippocrates the methods of assisting the woman in labour were often brutal. The woman was sometimes repeatedly lifted and dropped on a couch.






This method of tying the woman to a couch, which was then turned on end and pounded against a bundle of faggots on the ground, was finally abandoned by the Greek physicians amongst other aggressive procedures



Accordingly, the treatment of child-bearing women was considerably neglectful. During medieval times the mortality rate for both mother and child rose to a uniquely high level due to indifference to the suffering of women and to the low regard for the value of life.
This period was characterised by the fervour of religion and the squalor of daily life, consequently nothing was done to overcome the enormous mortality of mother and child at birth. Typical of this age were the attempts to form intrauterine baptismal tubes, by which the child, locked by some difficulty in the womb, could be baptized and its soul saved before mother and child were left to die.



                                                                BAPTISMAL SYRINGE


For applying this rite to infants before birth in cases of difficult labour. This particular syringe was designed and described by Mauriceau in the seventeenth century, and Laurence Sterne, in Tristram Shandy, quotes the original description in full. This syringe was the 'squirt' of his 'Dr. Slop'. In some designs the opening of the nozzle was made in the form of a cross to add sanctity to its use.








AN OBSTETRICAL CHAIR
The obstetrical chair upon which women sat during childbirth is mentioned in the Old Testament. The Greeks occasionally used a special bed or couch for this purpose, but the chair continued in general use until the 17th century and was often used as late as the 19th century. This particular design was recommended by Eucharius Roslin in 1513. 




Mauriceau of France in the seventeenth century started the innovation of using a bed for childbirth.




                                            OBSTETRICAL CHAIR IN USE

 A reproduction of a sixteenth-century woodcut appearing in The Garden of Roses for Pregnant Women, by Roslin.








In Medieval times religion took over the practices of the midwives, thus the Dominican monk, Albert Magnus (Albert von Bollstadt 1193-1280 ), wrote a book for the guidance of midwives, and the Church councils passed edicts on their practices. These instructions and edicts were not, however, for the better care of the child-bearing woman, for the relief of her suffering or the prevention of her death. They were designed to save the child's life for a sufficient time to allow it to be baptized. The Council of Cologne in 1280 decreed that on the sudden death of a woman in labour her mouth was to be kept open with a gag so that her child would not suffocate while it was being removed by operation.

By the beginning of the Renaissance practices improved little. Even in a normal delivery the woman often died from infection or eclampsia. In difficult labour she was left to die or butchered to death if her midwife was so inclined, or a rogue 'surgeon' could be found to assist the slaughter. As a rule the matter was left entirely in the hands of the midwife, and in 1580 a law was passed in Germany to prevent shepherds and herdsmen from attending obstetrical cases. An indication of the advancement in care of the childbearing woman and the appalling conditions it had advanced from.






                                                      FIFTEENTH-CENTURY NURSE AND CHILD

From 'Versehung des Liebs'. Accompanying this picture were the following directions for selecting a nurse ( translation is from Ruhrah, Pediatrics of the Past) .

"At times it happens that from various causes the Mother cannot suckle the child herself. In such a case one must choose a nurse for the child. Her qualifications should be as follows. 

The nurse should be of shapely stature, not too young and not too old. She must at all times be free from illness of eyes or body. Moreover, her nature must be such that there is no defect in her body.  Mark also, that she must be neither too slim, nor too plump. If there should be any defect in her, the child would incline towards it. 
She must have a good character, modest, chaste and clean. 
Her food should be in conformity with the following directions, so that the milk may remain fully nourishing. I prescribe her to eat white bread and good meat, also rice and lettuce every day. Almonds as well as hazel nuts she should not do without. Her beverage must be pure wine; and in moderation must be used in bathing. Nor must she do much labour. 
In case her milk should give out, she must not forget to eat peas frequently and in quantity, also beans, and in addition gruel which should be boiled in milk beforehand. She must also rest and sleep a good deal so that the child may thrive on the milk. Moreover, she must carefully avoid onions and garlic; as well as any bitter or sour food and any dish containing pepper. 
She must eat no over-salted food, nor anything prepared with vinegar.
Love's intercourse she must also avoid or go in for it very moderately. For in case she should become pregnant, her milk would be harmful to the child. In order that the child may not be harmed in such a case, one must wean it from the milk."


This scenario was for the privileged few because this was a time when public, domestic and personal hygiene was appalling. The walled cities were for the most part densely crowded and had no drainage. Filth accumulated in the unpaved streets. The houses were described by Erasmus as containing open cesspools, their floors were strewn with refuse, and in them was a pestilence of flies and vermin. They were indeed sinks of filth and infection.
Ancient Rome had paved streets, Paris had none until the eleventh century and London had its first paved streets in the sixteenth century. In that same century Frankfurt-on- the-Main began requiring each house to have a ‘privy’ and ordered that the pigpens of the city should be cleaned.


Eucharius Roslin, of Worms, in response to the wishes of Catherine, the Duchess of Brunswick, wrote a manual from which the ignorant and careless old women who made up the midwives might learn to conduct their work in a safer and more efficient manner. This book was published in Worms in 1513 and contained nothing that was new, but did bring to light the work of the Greeks; it was, however, marked with the superstition of medieval medicine, and with the horrible doctrine of medieval surgical midwifery.

The prejudices which at that time existed in the minds of people, particularly in cities, against the slightest participation of males in the practice of midwifery, were so great that Roslin, who had probably never seen a child born, may have felt something of the humour of his position, for the title of his book was The Garden of Roses for Pregnant Women and Midwives. The book, nevertheless, accomplished much good; it was extensively plagiarised by later authors and was translated into Latin, French, Dutch, and English - in which the title became The Byrthe of Mankynde.




                                  EUCHARIUS ROSLIN PRESENTING HIS BOOK TO THE DUCHESS OF BRUNSWICK








   
A PAGE FROM 'THE BYRTHE OF MANKYNDE' - WILLIAM RAYNALDE'S ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF ROSLIN'S BOOK ON MIDWIFERY


The exclusion of men from the study of child-bearing women tended to reach fanatical extremes. In 1522, Dr Wertt, of Hamburg wore the dress of a woman to attend and study a case of labour; he was punished for this lack of reverence by being burned to death.






Three Kids Gripped By Evil By Polly Mullaney     
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