Published in Med Hist on January 01, 1986
Association between vitamin D deficiency and primary cesarean section. J Clin Endocrinol Metab (2008) 1.61
Global Consensus Recommendations on Prevention and Management of Nutritional Rickets. J Clin Endocrinol Metab (2016) 1.43
Puerperal fever, the streptococcus, and the sulphonamides, 1911-1945. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) (1987) 1.36
Group B streptococcus and early-onset sepsis in the era of maternal prophylaxis. Pediatr Clin North Am (2009) 1.14
Powers of life and death: aspects of maternal welfare in England and Wales between the wars. Med Hist (1991) 0.92
Puerperal insanity in the 19th century. J R Soc Med (1988) 0.87
What can Mchinji and Ntcheu districts in Malawi tell maternal health pundits globally? Croat Med J (2010) 0.83
The lesser pestilence: non-epidemic puerperal fever. Med Hist (1991) 0.75
"An abortionist city": maternal mortality, abortion, and birth control in Sheffield, 1920-1940. Med Hist (2000) 0.75
The nature of provincial medical practice in eighteenth-century England. Med Hist (1985) 3.07
The concept of the family doctor. Bull Hist Med (1984) 2.32
Epidemiological aspects of hypertensive pregnancy. Clin Obstet Gynaecol (1977) 1.73
Changing pattern of mortality in England and Wales. II. Maternal mortality. Br J Prev Soc Med (1954) 1.08
An attempt to estimate the true rate of maternal mortality, sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. Med Hist (1982) 1.02
Ignorant midwives - a rejoinder. Soc Soc Hist Med Bull (Lond) (1983) 1.01
Maternal health in the English aristocracy: myths and realities (1790-1840). J Soc Hist (1983) 0.98
Obstetrics in the 17th and 18th centuries and its implication for maternal and infant mortality. Soc Soc Hist Med Bull (Lond) (1977) 0.98
The Hippocratic oath. BMJ (1994) 4.37
Medical education and medical reform. Clio Med (1995) 3.35
The nature of provincial medical practice in eighteenth-century England. Med Hist (1985) 3.07
The concept of the family doctor. Bull Hist Med (1984) 2.32
General practice in 1952. Br J Gen Pract (2001) 2.02
Maternal mortality: 1880-1950. Some regional and international comparisons. Soc Hist Med (1988) 1.97
How it strikes a historian. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) (1984) 1.66
Obstetric care, social class, and maternal mortality. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) (1986) 1.21
The transformation of maternal mortality. BMJ (1993) 1.11
On maternal and infant mortality, 1900-1960. Soc Hist Med (1991) 0.98
The diseases called chlorosis. Psychol Med (1984) 0.90
Necrotising fasciitis, hospital gangrene, and phagedena. Lancet (1994) 0.81
Limits to demand for health care. Gap between demand for services and cost of providing them should certainly be assessed. BMJ (2001) 0.75
Euthanasia debate. Euthanasia is an option which alleviates patients' fear. BMJ (1995) 0.75
Home births. A revival of home births would have to be led by community midwives. BMJ (1997) 0.75
The cause and prevention of puerperal sepsis. J R Soc Med (2000) 0.75
Prosperity and poverty in general practice 1750-1850. Soc Soc Hist Med Bull (Lond) (1987) 0.75
Deaths in childbed from the late eighteenth century to 1935. Soc Soc Hist Med Bull (Lond) (1985) 0.75
Two thousand medical men in 1847. Soc Soc Hist Med Bull (Lond) (1983) 0.75
Maternal mortality: an historical audit. J R Coll Gen Pract (1984) 0.75
Dr John Radcliffe and his Trust. Essay review. Med Hist (1992) 0.75
On talks. Med Hist (1997) 0.75
The tragedy of puerperal fever. Health Libr Rev (1998) 0.75
The consultation. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) (1984) 0.75
Save the general practice record. BMJ (1989) 0.75
The market for medicine. Essay review. Med Hist (1995) 0.75
Patients and practitioners. Lay perceptions of medicine in pre-industrial society. Med Hist (1987) 0.75
'I'd rather have been a parish surgeon than a union one'. Soc Soc Hist Med Bull (Lond) (1986) 0.75
John Bull's physicians. Med Humanit Rev (1988) 0.75