Memorandum on maternal mortality

1928-07 1928 1920s 10 pages - 7 - The number of births per year (1926) was 694,563; approximately 8 per cent. of these could be confined in an institution. In "The Protection of Motherhood" (p.18) attention is drawn to outbreaks of puerperal infection in certain maternity institu...

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Main Author: Labour Party (Great Britain). Advisory Committee on Public Health (contributor)
Institution:MCR - The Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
Language:English
English
Published: July 1928
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10796/5FAB0C15-BFD5-4674-A790-8548A0F044AF
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/31C53DBB-5DC7-4B5B-852B-7B5095A71D80
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author Labour Party (Great Britain). Advisory Committee on Public Health
author_facet Labour Party (Great Britain). Advisory Committee on Public Health
author_role contributor
description 1928-07 1928 1920s 10 pages - 7 - The number of births per year (1926) was 694,563; approximately 8 per cent. of these could be confined in an institution. In "The Protection of Motherhood" (p.18) attention is drawn to outbreaks of puerperal infection in certain maternity institutions, and it is stated that "a case of mild infection in a hospital is a far more serious affair than a similar infection in a private house where the patient does not come into contact with other puerperal women." III. A COMPLETE MATERNITY SERVICE The first step is to make the Maternity and Child Welfare Act (1918) compulsory; all the necessary powers are contained in it for a complete maternity service. This will only exist when every local authority is compelled to provide assistance for every mother in its district, adequate to meet the requirements not only of normal cases but also of any complication or emergency at any time in pregnancy, during labour or in the puerperium. The functions will necessarily be varied and may be divided into the following groups:- 1. Clinics 2. Domiciliary services 3. Institutional services. 1) CLINICS (a) Ante-natal centres. Attendance at these centres should be encouraged from the earliest possible time. The visits should be at regular intervals and on each occasion the mother should be seen by the medical officer. Treatment of concurrent diseases (dental, V.D., etc.) should be carried out by the general practitioners, local clinics or by the hospitals. The medical officer should use to the full the facilities provided for the proper nourishment of the mother; meals rather than milk being supplied in necessitous cases. The medical officer should have special knowledge and experience of midwifery. In the management of the centres one should aim at the closest co-operation between the midwives. 292/824/1/121
geographic UK
id HEA-2233_651e07cb08da4226bab983ad29ba29ef
institution MCR - The Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
is_hierarchy_title Memorandum on maternal mortality
language English
English
physical TEXT
publishDate July 1928
spellingShingle Labour Party (Great Britain). Advisory Committee on Public Health
Trades Union Congress
Maternity and Child Welfare, 1924-1934
Health care
Maternal mortality
Memorandum on maternal mortality
title Memorandum on maternal mortality
topic Trades Union Congress
Maternity and Child Welfare, 1924-1934
Health care
Maternal mortality
url http://hdl.handle.net/10796/5FAB0C15-BFD5-4674-A790-8548A0F044AF
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/31C53DBB-5DC7-4B5B-852B-7B5095A71D80