tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8395646.post5898452649993964197..comments2024-03-06T19:21:15.708-05:00Comments on RealChoice: Today's anniversariesChristina Duniganhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04785550737493692252noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8395646.post-41789253815560427672010-07-12T23:54:38.775-04:002010-07-12T23:54:38.775-04:00I imagine it can't be too much different from ...<i>I imagine it can't be too much different from maternal and abortion mortality at the very beginning of the 20th Century.' - but you really have no idea at all.</i><br />The first record-keeping didn't start until 1915; that year, the maternal mortality rate was somewhere around 600/100,000; it spiked with the Spanish Influenza epidemic around 1918-1919, going to 900/100,000, and then dropping again to the mid-600s, but steadily increasing throughout the 1920s and into the first half of the 1930s.<br /><br />There is evidence that birth was riskier for both mother and baby as it moved out of homes with midwives and into hospitals with doctors), yet the average person didn't know this, believing the hospital to be safer. It wasn't. There is some evidence that even obstetricians of that era recognized that midwives and home-birth were safer than hospital-birth (with doctor-attended home-birth being in the middle), yet they still campaigned against midwives, calling them ignorant and uneducated (at a time when many doctors started delivering babies after having only watched a handful of births, without participating in any!), and also maligning them as dirty (in contrast to the shiny "sterile" hospitals that were often anything but). Women were much more likely to die of puerperal fever in the hospital (due to generous episiotomies and a high C-section rate, with no antibiotics to fight the inevitable infections), but the perception was that hospitals and doctors were safer.<br /><br />Finally in the mid-1930s, the White House released a report on maternal mortality calling, among other things, for a reduction in medical practices such as C-sections, as a way to reduce maternal mortality. The next year there was a slight reduction. Also around this time, blood transfusion became much safer and more common, and sulfa drugs became available. Maternal mortality finally began to decline. With the advent of penicillin, it began a free-fall, dropping from around 600/100,000 in the mid-30s to around 20/100,000 prior to the legalization of abortion.<br /><br />Most likely, the maternal mortality of the late 1800s was not markedly different from the maternal mortality of the early 1900s (being only 10-20 years removed). It possibly was lower, due to more home-births with midwives; although there may have been advances in medicine and sanitation in the early 1900s that improved things -- moving to automobiles from horses with all their attendant manure in city streets springs to mind as a possible factor. If you know of any reason(s) that would make 1889 markedly different from 1915, feel free to cite it or them.<br /><br />Stick around on the blog a little longer and maybe you'll see another of Christina's regular posts about why she blogs about these abortion deaths from more than a century ago.Kathyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10118292622669944944noreply@blogger.com