The historical literature on maternal death gives little attention to the problem in Scotland. Data in a popular, yet serious, national publication for 1739–1772 suggest that there was some public interest in the problem of maternal mortality. This interest may have been associated with the democratization of many forms of knowledge, central to the Scottish Enlightenment. The publication of these data is linked to the little-known, but ground-breaking, work of Alexander Gordon on puerperal fever in Aberdeen, which long predated the study by Ignaz Semmelweis. This 18th-century publication is compared with the popular media of the 21st century
Setting in dialogue a range of texts from fiction and diaries to medical journals and letters, from ...
The Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths (CEMDs) in the UK have a long, honourable and freque...
In Scotland, medical understanding of, medical practice in relation to, and medical attitudes toward...
The perinatal mortality rate (defined as stillbirths and all first week deaths per 1000 total births...
Background The fifth Millennium Development Goal formulated by the WHO in, aimed to reduce global ma...
At the turn of the twentieth century, County Durham, a coal-mining region in England’s Northeast, ex...
"The direction of the food, cloaths and other necessaries for the persons of children falls to the m...
This thesis demonstrates how literary and medical authors explored changing concepts of childbirth a...
Lucy Chappell and colleagues examine the dramatic reduction in maternal deaths from hypertensive dis...
Three hundred years ago, in 1660, from information supplied by Sir James Y. Simpson and E. V. Sievek...
A large amount of the research undertaken in an attempt to discover the reasons underlying the late ...
The first day of life is the most dangerous, and Bob Woods’ final book, co-authored with Chris Galle...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein).While the rare occurrence of child loss is accompanied by reduce...
Multiple sources were used to identify maternal deaths and their causes in a study carried out in Ja...
The author considers three methods of counting maternal deaths, and hence of calculating maternal mo...
Setting in dialogue a range of texts from fiction and diaries to medical journals and letters, from ...
The Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths (CEMDs) in the UK have a long, honourable and freque...
In Scotland, medical understanding of, medical practice in relation to, and medical attitudes toward...
The perinatal mortality rate (defined as stillbirths and all first week deaths per 1000 total births...
Background The fifth Millennium Development Goal formulated by the WHO in, aimed to reduce global ma...
At the turn of the twentieth century, County Durham, a coal-mining region in England’s Northeast, ex...
"The direction of the food, cloaths and other necessaries for the persons of children falls to the m...
This thesis demonstrates how literary and medical authors explored changing concepts of childbirth a...
Lucy Chappell and colleagues examine the dramatic reduction in maternal deaths from hypertensive dis...
Three hundred years ago, in 1660, from information supplied by Sir James Y. Simpson and E. V. Sievek...
A large amount of the research undertaken in an attempt to discover the reasons underlying the late ...
The first day of life is the most dangerous, and Bob Woods’ final book, co-authored with Chris Galle...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein).While the rare occurrence of child loss is accompanied by reduce...
Multiple sources were used to identify maternal deaths and their causes in a study carried out in Ja...
The author considers three methods of counting maternal deaths, and hence of calculating maternal mo...
Setting in dialogue a range of texts from fiction and diaries to medical journals and letters, from ...
The Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths (CEMDs) in the UK have a long, honourable and freque...
In Scotland, medical understanding of, medical practice in relation to, and medical attitudes toward...