1st. Every woman should know, and is entitled to
know, just what condition she is in, because if she has been torn to an extent that needs attention, and is left in ignorance of it, her physical health may be slowly and seriously undermined and the cause of it may not be understood or even guessed at. A woman who becomes nervous and irritable, loses vim and vitality, has headaches, backaches and anemia, and no symptoms, or few, that point to disease of the womb, will suffer a long time before she seeks relief of the right kind, and will be astonished and outraged when she is told that it all results from a bad tear of her womb that she knew nothing about.
2nd. A physician should in justice to himself insist on this late examination, because if a woman is told, at some subsequent time, by another physician that she is badly torn, and she was not told of it by the physician who confined her, she is very apt to form an unjust opinion of his work and to entertain an unfriendly feeling toward him as a man.
Some physicians also, to their discredit, are not slow in permitting an unjust opinion of a colleague to be spread around, by preserving a silence, when an explanation would result in an entirely different opinion by the patient. They permit it to be inferred that the physician was responsible for the tear, when such is not the case. No physician on earth can prevent a tear of the mouth of the womb and this should be explained to the patient. Where the physician is at fault is in the failure to examine his patients when it is possible to tell that a tear of any consequence exists. If such an examination is made, he is in a position to state that a tear exists of sufficient extent to justify careful attention. Immediate operation is seldom necessary, and if the patient is comparatively young, it may not be wise to operate, because if pregnancy takes place within a reasonable time the womb will again tear. She should be told, however, that should she not become pregnant during the next three years she should be examined from time to time, and if the condition of her womb, or her health suggest it, she should have the tear attended to. If after this explanation she neglects herself she must blame
herself, she will at least have no cause to harbor any resentment against her physician who has done all any physician is called upon to do under the circumstances. Another important reason for finding out the character of the laceration is because these lacerations of the mouth of the womb frequently cause sterility.
CHAPTER X
NURSING MOTHERS
The Diet of Nursing Mothers—Care of the Nipples—Cracked Nipples—Tender Nipples—Mastitis in Nursing Mothers—Inflammation of the Breasts—When Should a Child Be Weaned?—Method of Weaning—Nursing While Menstruating—Care of Breasts While Weaning Child—Nervous Nursing Mothers—Birth Marks—Qualifications of a Nursery Maid.