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LABOR seems completed with the expulsion of the child, the one act upon which the efforts of the accoucheur and the expectations of the patient have centred, the culmination of hours of suffering and anxiety; both feel as if their work were completed, and but little thought is given by either to the remaining afterbirth which is usually expelled without much suffering to the mother, and if nature be not interfered with, rarely calls for any exertion on the part of the attendant.

Accidents occurring during the birth of the child are immediately followed by alarming results, while those happening during the delivery of the placenta can be ignored at the time, although the consequences are often disastrous. The third stage of labor accordingly excites but little interest, and is, I may almost say, unduly neglected; some radical changes have of late years been made in its treatment, but, although advocated by able obstetricians, they have by no means met with the hearty concurrence of the profession at large, of which they deserve and which their importance justifies.

My attention has been recently directed to what I may call the natural management of labor, or the customs observed during childbirth by such people as are not yet governed by modern obstetric law, and who follow the dictates of instinct in this purely mechanical function of our animal existence; my researches in regard to the position of women in labor have shown me the correctness of the course adopted by those


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untutored people with whom methods have been traditionary for ages which have not until now reached us, in this advanced nineteenth century, as the teachings of our most scientific obstetricians; and I deem it of interest, if not of some little practical importance, to study the management of the placenta, indeed the treatment of the patient during the third stage of labor, among uncivilized people who are as yet forced to rely upon their instinct for their obstetric practice, and upon whom the obstetric laws, and I may say obstetric fashions, of to-day have not yet encroached. It is only of late that ethnological studies have developed and have brought to light the innermost life and most private and secret customs of those interesting children of nature; but very little attention has, however, been paid to their obstetric practices, and above all to this very uninteresting and unimportant detail.

The management of the third stage of labor has received so little attention that I shall be obliged to confine myself, by reason of the scanty data at my command, to the leading points; I nevertheless hope to be able to develop the more important features sufficiently to show that these untutored people, following the guidance of instinct, have, as a rule, pursued a much more correct practice than can be attributed to the followers of scientific midwifery; above all they have fully appreciated, in resorting to abdominal expression, the dangers of the vis a fronte, and the importance of the vis a tergo as their main reliance for the speedy and successful removal of the placenta. Nor are the data as broad as I should like to see them; I can gather but little from the records of travellers or from the pages of history; the information I have been able to obtain is almost altogether in regard to the customs now observed among the North American Indians, and for this I am indebted to the kindly interest shown by the surgeons of the United States Army, and the physicians of the Indian Agencies who have freely responded to the questions I have put in the circular sent out through the Smithsonian Institution by the generous offices of Major J. W. Powell, the director, and others of the gentlemen connected with the Bureau of Ethnology, above all Dr. H. C. Yarrow.

I shall discuss, first, the management of the third stage of labor in simple cases, as it is customary among the various


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tribes, and this will be best understood by describing, I., those methods which are adopted for the purpose of expelling the placenta, in which the patient retains the same position which she occupied in the delivery of the child, and, of these, the one ordinarily practiced is by the employment of a vis a tergo, most commonly by a force applied externally from above downwards, by manual expression; and secondly, by action of the diaphragm, by the use of emetics. Much less frequent is the employment of the vis a fronte, that fatal traction upon the cord, which forms the third group. Somewhat different from these methods is a fourth, which I have classified under II., comprising the customs of all those tribes who look upon a change of posture as the important element for the purpose of accomplishing the expulsion of the after-birth; a change of position is made immediately after the birth of the child, and the patient assumes a different posture from the one occupied during the earlier stages of labor. This is not frequent in ordinary cases, but is a usual resort in case that some difficulty is experienced in the removal of the placenta. I have then considered under different heads the treatment of simple and difficult cases, and will next review the management of the cord, as it may be of interest to note the usual time of cutting the cord and the methods of cutting and tying it; finally I will briefly indicate some of the more peculiar customs, and the, to us, strange views entertained with regard to this stage of labor.