Woman: a Series of Letters to His Class

Cover Woman: a Series of Letters to His Class
Woman: a Series of Letters to His Class
Charles Delucena Meigs
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not die, because she fainted so badly that the vascular injection by the heart was too feeble to kill her by hemorrhage. She slowly recovered in a measure, but bleeds still upon the smallest excess of exercise or labor.
Well, now, my young friend, you have made your diagnostic; what are you to do for the patient? Will you reposit or reinstate this womb? You can't. You might as well try to invert one of the non-gravid uteri on my lecture-room table as to reposit this one.
The time is gone by. Yo
...u have no art or skill, nor any power equal to the performance of such a miracle of surgery as that.
I can with difficulty conceive of a more dreadful condition for a lying-in woman than that in which she is placed by a total inversion of the womb in labor. For example — here is a case that I have already published in my Practice of Midwifery; but which I think it right to republish in this letter. It is the case of Mrs. S., in S. 7tb Street, which occurred in June, 1881.
Case. — It seems that, having in both the preceding labors suffered severely from the method adopted by the physician in removing the after-birth, and supposing that a midwife would deal more geotly with her, she engaged an old woman much accustomed, as it was said, to the care of women in labor, to attend upon her in this confinement.


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