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What a blessing she had chloroform : the medical and social response to the pain of childbirth from 1800 to the present / Donald Caton.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Caton, Donald, 1937-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Anesthesia in obstetrics--History.
Anesthesia in obstetrics.
Pain--Prevention--History.
Pain.
Anesthesia, Obstetrical--history.
Pain--prevention & control.
Labor, Obstetric.
Social Values.
Anesthesia, Obstetrical.
Anesthesia.
Sensation.
Pregnancy.
Neurologic Manifestations.
Signs and Symptoms.
Psychology, Social.
Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms.
Nervous System Diseases.
Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms.
Nervous System Physiological Phenomena.
Reproduction.
Anesthesia and Analgesia.
Psychophysiology.
Disease.
Reproductive Physiological Phenomena.
Psychological Phenomena.
Psychiatry.
Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena.
Reproductive and Urinary Physiological Phenomena.
Medical Subjects:
Anesthesia, Obstetrical--history.
Pain--prevention & control.
Labor, Obstetric.
Pain.
Social Values.
Anesthesia, Obstetrical.
Anesthesia.
Sensation.
Pregnancy.
Neurologic Manifestations.
Signs and Symptoms.
Psychology, Social.
Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms.
Nervous System Diseases.
Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms.
Nervous System Physiological Phenomena.
Reproduction.
Anesthesia and Analgesia.
Psychophysiology.
Disease.
Reproductive Physiological Phenomena.
Psychological Phenomena.
Psychiatry.
Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena.
Reproductive and Urinary Physiological Phenomena.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xvi, 288 p. ) ill. ;
Place of Publication:
New Haven : Yale University Press, c1999.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
"This book describes in fascinating detail the history of the use of anesthesia in childbirth and in so doing offers a unique perspective on the interaction between medical science and social values. Dr. Donald Caton traces the responses of physicians and their patients to the pain of childbirth from the popularization of anesthesia to the natural childbirth movement and beyond. He finds that physicians discovered what could be done to manage pain, and patients decided what would be done."--Jacket.
Contents:
pt. I. Physicians and the pain of childbirth. 1. "The head of Jove and the body of Bacchus" : James Young Simpson and the beginning of obstetric anesthesia
"A cup of Circe" : The opposition to obstetric anesthesia
3. "Bled, leeched, salivated" :The transformation of medical practice by science
4. "The queen in her confinement" : John Snow's approach to anesthesia
5. "The tender organization of the newborn" : Balancing the risks of pain and anesthesia
pt. II. Women and the pain of childbirth. 6. "The sin of our first parents" : The social connotations of pain
7. "This blessed chloroform" : Pain as biological and anesthesia as necessary
8. "There ought to be no pain" : The American women's campaign for twilight sleep
9. "Labor is pathogenic" : The national birthday trust fund campaign in Great Britain
10. "As God intended" : Grantly Dick Read and the natural childbirth movement
pt. III. In the delivery room: physicians and women together. 11. "Pain makes things valuable" : The danger of drugs and the social value of pain
12. "The greatest misery of sickness is solitude" : Current controversy.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references (p. [235]-277) and index.
ISBN:
0-300-17336-9
0-585-36204-1

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