late 1950s onwards I eould think; district midwifery casebooks suggest that synt was rountinely used by mid-60s though Myles 4th edition textbook was still encouraging masterly inactivity in 1962, by 6th edition in 1968 she was saying that 'some' midwives used synt at crowning but said that midwives working alone should only give it after delivery in case of problems with the shoulders.
best wishes
Tania
Dr Tania McIntosh
Lecturer in Midwifery
University of Nottingham
Secretary of De Partu: history of childbirth group.
departu.org.uk
Exhibition: Mothers and Midwives: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/manuscriptsandspecialcollections/exhibitions/westongalleryexhibition.aspx
Nottingham International Conference for Education and Research in Midwifery 7th-8th September 2012: abstract call now open.
www.nottingham.ac.uk/midwifery/nicer/
McIntosh T (2012) A social history of maternity care Routledge
________________________________________
From: A forum for discussion on midwifery and reproductive health research. [[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Carol Lambert [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: 28 March 2012 09:11
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: History of Syntometrine use
Hi all,
Does anyone have any information on the use of Syntometrine and when, what decade this became routine use for women in Britain?
Thanks in advance for any response.
Carol Lambert
PhD Student
Faculty of Health and Social Care
University of Hull
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