SAFE MATERNITY
NEW ZEALAND'S AIM MEDICAL PAPER'S COMMENTS "The annual report of the DirectorGeneral of Health for New Zealand possesses its own significance for readers in Great Britain, and that for the past year will be read with much pleasure and interest," says the December number of "Public Health," London, the official organ of the Society of Medical Health. "There is none of the Dominions where the English stock and heritage survives and flourishes with greater security, or where more pride and purpose are shown in the endeavour to emulate and surpass standards of English home and national life, assisted by conditions of climate and occupation comparatively but little different from our own. We are glad, therefore, to find opportunity of considering and comparing tho things that matter in our mutual efforts on behalf of public health. "In infant welfare, New Zealand has long held, and deserved, an uneqnalled reputation; she caries the lowest infantile mortality as well as the lowest general death-rate in the world. In mortality from, tuberculosis her record is almost as good, and the incidence of typhoid fever has been reduced to negligible proportions. All these things make fine reading in the report of a country of which a great part is still in. tho hands of the pioneers, and where much depends on far-sighted and alert departmental activity." • After analysing the infantilo and maternal mortality death-rates, the article continues:— "That tho Health Department is well nwara of improvements that may bo effected in regard to tho latter is made clear by plans on foot for new equipment and accommodation, a standardised asceptic routine, extended training for midwives, etc., and tho decline in the hospital mortality rate, which would be expected from an improved realisation of ideals of midwifery practice, will no doubt evidence itself now with the minimum of delay. But, as Dr. Jellet (consultant obstetrician) says, until by the goodwill of the Plunket Society or otherwise, a Chair of Obstetrics is nehieved for the TJunedin University Medical School, tho practice of midwifery cannot be expected to attain the highest level of excellence in tho Dominion generally, and it will be a little while before New Zealand, in ensuring maximum safety and protection for her motherhood, quite reaches the glorious and conspicuous place above all others that she has already won for herself in respect of her babies."
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 24, 30 January 1928, Page 10
Word Count
393SAFE MATERNITY Evening Post, Volume CV, Issue 24, 30 January 1928, Page 10
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