Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/15281
Title: Vestiges of the parturition chair in Malta
Authors: Cassar, Paul
Keywords: Childbirth -- Malta
Childbirth at home -- Malta -- History -- 18th century
Childbirth at home -- Malta -- History -- 19th century
Delivery (Obstetrics)
Issue Date: 1973
Publisher: The St. Luke`s Hospital Gazette
Citation: Cassar, P. (1973). Vestiges of the parturition chair in Malta. The St. Luke`s Hospital Gazette, 8(1), 58-60.
Abstract: It is not known when the birth-chair was introduced in the Maltese Islands. It was recognised as an item of the armamentarium of the midwife and obstetrician by the 18th century. Some of them have been found to be uncomfortable, troublesome and dangerous for the patient. Some of the chairs of Malta were hinged so that they could fold down flat for easy conveyance by the midwife. In 1852 Dr. G. Clinquant designed an obstetrical bed which could be converted into a birth-chair .He demonstrated its mechanism to obstetricians and midwives and explained the "facility and comfort by which every manoeuvre" of delivery could be effected. In the eighties of the last century one Professor Salvatore Luigi Pisani warned midwives against using the chair mainly because, with the patient in a sitting position, the midwife could not maintain adequate flexion of the baby's head by supporting the perineum. It was not easy, however, to convince parturient women to do away with the chair.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/15281
Appears in Collections:TSLHG, Volume 8, Issue 1
TSLHG, Volume 8, Issue 1

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Vestiges of the Parturition Chair in Malta.pdfPublished for the Consultant Staff Committee, St. Luke`s Hospital, Malta and the Medical and Dental Surgery Faculties of the Royal University of Malta.271.24 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in OAR@UM are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.