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In 19th-century America, cesarean section was a treacherous, last-ditch surgery that nearly always resulted in death of the infant and, half the time, the mother. Fast forward to today, where 1 in 3 American babies is de...
The Astonishing American History of Cesarean Section - Jacqueline H. Wolf is an episode from Uncivilize by Jennifer Grayson. In 19th-century America, cesarean section was a treacherous, last-ditch surgery that nearly always resulted in deat...
This episode belongs to Uncivilize.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Apr 9, 2018, 1:23:48 long, audio available.
In 19th-century America, cesarean section was a treacherous, last-ditch surgery that nearly always resulted in death of the infant and, half the time, the mother. Fast forward to today, where 1 in 3 American babies is delivered via surgical birth. But even until the 1960s, cesarean section was virtually unknown to the American public, says my guest today, historian Jacqueline H. Wolf , the author of the riveting new book Cesarean Section: An American History of Risk, Technology and Consequence . The book, which will be published this May by Johns Hopkins University Press, was funded by a three-year-grant from the National Institutes of Health. In it, Professor Wolf unfolds an astounding story: How, over the span of a mere century (and most rapidly, a few decades), industrialized America normalized surgery as the means of bringing babies into the world. Some of you may recognize Jackie Wolf’s name from my book Unlatched (where she transported us to the death-by-artificial-infant-feeding epidemic of Industrial Age America). As a professor of the History of Medicine in the Department of Social Medicine at Ohio University, she is one of the foremost authorities on the history of breastfeeding and birth practices in the United States, having authored two prior books and numerous articles on the subjects in venues such as the American Journal of Public Health, Journal of Social History, and The Milbank Quarterly . I was captivated by my conversations with Jackie back then, and I hope you’ll be as captivated as I was by this one, here: From the story of the first cesarean in recorded American history, the myth of Julius Caesar and the racially charged past of early cesareans; to the rise of birth as a pathological process, Jackie Kennedy's role in all this, reclaiming birth in the 21st century (including how to avoid your own C-section) and more, you won’t want to miss this episode!
You can listen to The Astonishing American History of Cesarean Section - Jacqueline H. Wolf online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
The Astonishing American History of Cesarean Section - Jacqueline H. Wolf is an episode from Uncivilize by Jennifer Grayson.
This episode is 1:23:48 long.
This episode was published on Apr 9, 2018.
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Yes. This page shows related episodes from Uncivilize when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.
You can listen to The Astonishing American History of Cesarean Section - Jacqueline H. Wolf on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
The Astonishing American History of Cesarean Section - Jacqueline H. Wolf is from Uncivilize by Jennifer Grayson.
Published Apr 9, 2018 and 1:23:48 long