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Lying-in and Laying-out: Fetal Health and the Contribution of Midwifery
- Bulletin of the History of Medicine
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 81, Number 4, Winter 2007
- pp. 730-759
- 10.1353/bhm.2007.0104
- Article
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This article considers the quality of midwifery skills and practice principally in eighteenth-, nineteenth-, and early twentieth-century England. It discusses the merits of assessing effectiveness via differentials and changes in late-fetal rather than maternal mortality. Evidence from the lying-in hospitals, both in-patients and out-patients, in terms of stillbirths and the deaths of mothers and children is set against what is known from demographic studies of the background levels of early-age and maternal mortality. The conclusions emphasize the value of taking a "fetal health" perspective, rather than viewing midwifery simply in terms of maternal well-being. They also note the apparent superiority of London's position compared with the provinces and the steady improvement during the eighteenth century, and lack of progress during the nineteenth; and they reconfirm the particular dangers to mothers delivered as hospital in-patients. Finally, the considerable methodological problems faced by such studies are emphasized.