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MATERNAL MORTALITY.

IN THE DOMINION. THE CAUSES ANALYSED. INTERESTING CONCLUSIONS. In the New Zealand Medical Journal for | April there appears a very interesting article by Dr. Doris C. Gordon, of Stratford, on comparative obstetrics. Although, of course, primarily intended for perusal by medical practitioners, and therefore containing a good deal of detail which can hardly be repeated in a lay newspaper, there is much in the article that is of public interest, and which should give food for serious thought. Indeed, in opening her subject, Dr. Gordon says: ‘The fact that New Zealand loses annually some 157 mothers as the result of childbirth has become an urgent problem, not only for our profession, but also for our country.” And she then asks why our infant mortality rate, which is so good as to be unrivalled, should be contrasted with a painfully high rate of maternal mortality. She divides her enquiry into three ques. tions: (1) Is it the fault of the medical profession? (2) Is it that the women of New Zealand are more susceptible to the dangers of maternity? (3) Are the international statistics .published not a true indication? In regard to the medical profession, after comparing training in New Zealand and in .England and other European countries, Dr. Gordon concludes that in aseptic technique in midwifery the New Zealand student is working at an advantage, but in the matter of practical experience at a disadvantage, entirely due to the'absence of patients, particularly in ante-natal clinics, in this country. It is from the ranks of pauperism, and worse, in the older countries, that the class of patients is drawn which provides practice for the student, and, fortunately, in New Zealand, these classes are non-existent. LOWEST PAID WORK. Then, again, midwifery, while one of the most exacting forms of a general practice in New Zealand, is the lowest paid, and there are therefore practically no obstetrical specialists available for a general practitioner to turn to in an emergency, as there would be in older countries, while for a doctor to express a desire for further expert advice is to run the risk of being considered nervous or incapable. Is it any wonder, asks Dr. Gordon, that so many practitioners drop midwifery as soon as they can afford to do so ? The weak spot in the New Zealand medical service, in both private and hospital work, is the small amount of ante-natal supervision which is usually found . possible. It is here that patients can help, by accepting such supervision, not as the mere whim of a fussy doctor, but as a very real and important part of the duty of their medical attendant. As regards nurses, Dr. Gordon is convinced that the general standard of New Zealand nurses is as high as anywhere in the world, though, of course, in older countries, where many of the maternity cases are conducted entirely by nurses, they are prepared for this responsibility by longer training. Giving details of her own observations in Dutch and Austrian hospitals, Dr. Gordon was astonished at the lack not only of the aseptic technique upon which stress is laid in the New Zealand training, but also the absence of what we consider to be the ordinary amenities and decencies of life in those institutions, many patients, students, and nurses being in the one ward, with not even a screen around a patient’s bed. "Beyond the fact that with our scattered population, our hospitals are less accessible for emergency cases, we saw nothing in our travels to suggest that the maternity hospitals of New Zealand are responsible for our high mortality return,” proceeds Dr. Gordon. “Bed for bed, and in theatre equipment, we found that our small hospitals compared more than favourably with the average hospital in England and Holland.” . . . Infinitely the best nad most uniform maternity hospital system we saw was in Vienna. Yet the Austrian returns are higher than the Dutch, which again verifies the conclusion that the hospitals per se are not a determining factor in the returns of the various countries discussed here.” ARE OUR WOMEN MORE SUSCEPTIBLE? There remains the second part of Doctor Gordon’s enquiry. Are the women of New Zealand more susceptible to the dangers of maternity? Living, under such healthy conditions, this would seem most unlikely, yet the doctor maintains that this is the case, and instances three classes of disorders met with more frequently in New Zealand than in England, Holland, and Austria. Curiously enough, it is because of their robust health and the ideal living conditions in which they are brought up in New Zealand that women here are more susceptible to septic complications. Those who live in less favoured conditions obtain immunity by unconscious contact with and absorption of pathogenic organisms. In this country, the "State legislates our housing conditions, our public health systems stands between us and our infectious diseases, our Education Department instructs us in the laws of personal hygiene, our dentists and our throat specialists deprive us of the daily inoculation of minimal doses of microbes that our ancestors acquired from septic teeth and tonsils.” So, when all these benefactors have done their duty, the supercivilised woman product of modern preventive medicine, comes to her doctor in her hour of need, "so hypersensitised by the very processes that otherwise benefited her,” that she now has no resistance to the microbes of septicaemia that may assail her in childbirth. While epidemics of pueperal sepsis are preventible, Dr. Gordon submitted strong evidence to the effect that isolated cases of sepsis usually have their origin within the patient herself, and concluded that the desired reduction of this type is not likely to occur, "seeing that the whole trend of modern science is to make the parturient woman more and more susceptible to infection.” UNRELIABLE STATISTICS. Concerning statistics, it is obvious that comparisons between New Zealand and the older countries lead to erroneous conclusions, there being no doubt that in several countries visited the maternal mortality records are not collected with the same meticulous care which characterises the work here. "The attitude we should adopt,” Dr. Gordon rightly concluded, "is not how does New Zealand compare with America, Holland, or England, but rather we are losing annually so many mothers, which is far more than we can afford to lose; by what methods and organisation can we reduce this loss?” Few will disagree with her conclusions: Firstly, that the loss of 150 to 160 mothers annually calls for the earnest co-operation of practitioners, public

health officials, and the public themselves; and, secondly, that the increasing dangers of modern midwifery constitute a call to the best of our doctors to take up the difficult work, and necessitates a public enlightenment that will bring, not only financial remuneration proportionate to the responsibility of the work, but also that sympathetic lay co-operation without which progress is impossible. A REMINDER. That Johnson’s Cough Balsam is unrivalled for Coughs and Colds. This unfailing remedy has been tried and proved to be a first-class preparation. No household can afford to be without it. Soothing and curing, 2/6 large bottles. J. B. Austin, The Chemist, New Plymouth.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19260612.2.36

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 12 June 1926, Page 8

Word Count
1,190

MATERNAL MORTALITY. Taranaki Daily News, 12 June 1926, Page 8

MATERNAL MORTALITY. Taranaki Daily News, 12 June 1926, Page 8