1. Practising obstetrics in the 17th century: François Mauriceau (1637-1709).
- Author
-
Karamanou M, Creatsas G, Demetriou T, and Androutsos G
- Subjects
- Female, France, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, Humans, Pregnancy, Delivery, Obstetric history, Obstetrics history
- Abstract
In 17th century France, the practice of obstetrics passed from female midwives to medical men called accoucheurs. François Mauriceau, a prominent French obstetrician of the 17th century urged the need of an organised obstetrical education, emphasising anatomy. He invented the semi-recumbent or 'French' birthing position, the 'tire-tête' forceps, the 'Mauriceau manoeuvre' in breech delivery, and provided one of the first epidemiological analyses in obstetrics contributing enormously to the development of this specialty. His best-seller, Traité des maladies des femmes grosses revolutionised the practice of obstetrics.
- Published
- 2013
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