History of pregnancy and childbirth

I. Why is childbirth so hard?

  • Obstetrical dilemma
    • Posits conflicting evolutionary trends or imperatives
      • Walking upright (bipedal locomotion)
        • Requires a more narrow pelvis
      • Increasing intelligence
        • Requires a big head!
    • Result: Certain percentage of infants cannot fit through birth canal

II. Changing birthing practices

  • Before 1760, birth was a female affair
    • “social childbirth”
    • Overseen by midwives—non-interventionist
  • Late 18th century, doctors enter the birthing chamber – elite women only
  • “Medicalization” of childbirth
    • Two big steps; gradual, uneven process
      • Shift from midwives to doctors; and from home to hospital (1920s)
        • 1900: half of all American women still attended by midwives
        • 1930: Physicians attended 85 of all births
          • BUT, even in the mid-1930s, more than half of all births occurred in private homes
            • Maternal death rates remained high
            • Move to hospital did NOT initially lower death rate
    • Emphasis on pain and suffering persists

III. Historical interpretations of the history of childbirth

  • Pre-1960s: Seen as one of modern medicine’s greatest triumphs
    • These histories were often written by obstetricians
  • 1970s: New feminist reinterpretations
    • Perceived as attempt by male physicians to wrest control away from women
    • This interpretation reflected women’s frustration with modern birthing practices
    • Emerged in tandem w/a revival of midwifery and home births
  • Some truth to feminist interpretation
  • But misleading on two counts
    • Women themselves actively sought male doctors’ assistance in birth
    • At first, men did not aim for total control of the birthing process
      • Doctors and midwives often cooperated
      • Doctors seen as necessary only in difficult cases (about 5-10%)

IV. William Shippen

  • First physicians to teach midwifery/obstetrics—University of Pennsylvania (1762)
  • “male midwife”
  • First taught both female midwives and male physicians; soon limited lectures to men

V. Anesthesia

  • 1840s: Invention of chloroform; ether
  • 1853 Queen Victoria used in childbirth
  • Some doctors resisted
    • On religious grounds
    • On medical grounds
      • Idea that pain was “salutary”
    • On psychological grounds
      • Idea that pain strengthened mother love
    • Class and racial differences
      • Assumption that affluent, white women suffered more