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A31042 A companion for midwives, child-bearing women, and nurses directing them how to perform their respective offices : together with an essay, endeavouring to shew the influence of moral abuses upon the health of children / by Robert Barret ... Barret, Robert, Brother of Surgeons Hall. 1699 (1699) Wing B913; ESTC R14416 49,115 144

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stirring with a Silver Spoon till quite cold Give a Spoonful or two Morning and Evening It stops Fluxes of all sorts as the Bloody-Flux the Running call'd Gonorrhoea spitting of Blood c. In a word it may be call'd a general Syrup for all Weaknesses and may be taken in soft Ale or Small-Beer Upon Flooding or even in Women with Child I have let Blood very often with good success and have given this Syrup of Corals with some drops of Laudanam Liquidam and so set 'em to Bed to lie as still as they can In some Constitutions eight Grains of Pilulae de Styrace or the Pills of Storax are very successful they stop Coughs or Fluxes and may be given every Night or every other Night 'T is to be had at most Apothecaries ready prepar'd so I shall not give my self the trouble to transcribe its Composition I could easily give a thousand Recipe's but I mention nothing but what I have often prov'd to be successful For the Whites and all sorts of Weaknesses that may occasion Miscarriage you may purge once or twice as the Condition of the Patient requires and then give the following Receipt Take of the whitest and best Isinglass cut into bits and well bruis'd two Ounces and a Pint or two of Water put all over the Fire let it simmer then take it off cover it close all Night The next Day boil it gently till it be all dissolv'd Then strain it and add one Pint of New Milk and an Ounce or two of white Sugar-candy powder'd and melted in the Milk over the Fire gently then mix all together This makes an excellent Gelly Ye may take half a Pint or a Pint Night and Morning in distill'd milk-Milk-water for a Fortnight together or longer If ye will ye may every time add Powder of Cinnamon as much as a Six-pence will hold SECT III. The Character and Duty of a Nurse with reference to the Child from the Time of its Birth to its removal from her Conduct Together with an Essay upon what Influence Moral Abuses may have upon its Health I Hope none will deny that the Health and Welfare of Children depends much upon the Condition of the Nurse therefore I thought it not amiss to assist you a little in the choice of one First Let her be Young and Healthy for if ye give very stale Milk and from an infirm Woman the Child for ever may suffer Let her feed upon such Food as she was accustom'd to before If ye follow the way of our City Dames in taking her into the House and feeding her high this makes the Milk rampant the Child Humoursom and Fanciful always crying for Slops and such like corrupting Food Hippocrates affirms That the Nurse ought to take the Child from its Mothers Womb and inure it to eat such like course Food as she gives to her own at Home this makes the Child brisk and hardy and fit for launching into an ill World In the next place choose one Lively Witty and of a meek Temper Galen and other Greek Physicians were very curious in this particular to make choice of a Nurse of good Education and Wit Some Nurses are Humoursom still complaining Peevish and Fretful crying perhaps to have their Wages rais'd to be better Entertain'd c. Others are better Condition'd easie in their Humour and not so difficult to please Now since the Child partakes much of a Nurses Complexion and Humour by sucking her Milk we ought to be very cautious in choosing a Nurse endow'd with the same Qualities as we wish to our Children If they are Immoral Debauch'd Cursing Swearing c. their very Example and Company is influencive upon Children who are generally more led by the Eye than the Ear and retain those Impressions fastest which are stamp'd upon 'em in their Young and Tender Years For the Moisture and pliableness of their tender Brains makes way for deeper Furrows than when of a firmer and compacter consistency Besides they are liable to be infected not only by their external Words and Actions but by the internal Byass and Inclinations of their Minds be what they will by reason of the Affinity intercedes betwixt the Qualities of the Milk and the Disposition of the Person that gives it A Nurse also ought to be diligent and careful some are huffing and bouncing about and do not mind the poor Child but let it sit or lie half a Day in a wet Condition starving and cripling 't is a great abuse too frequent and common among 'em Mothers ought to take care to surprize Nurses at their own Houses when they are not aware and find out the Miscarriage of these She Murderers that they may not go unpunish'd In the beginning the Child must not Suck too much nor too often that his Stomach not yet accustom'd to concoct the Milk may be brought on by degrees and so enabled to digest it afterwards Let its Portions be augmented every Day by little and little till it be in a capacity to take its Belly full Some when they find a Nurses Milk very good do allow the Child nothing for the first two Months but what it sucks from the Breasts after that the Child must have stronger Nourishment as Pap Fine Gruels Milk-Water and Oatmeal with Canary or what else the Child's Friends or the Nurse thinks fit When the Child's Belly is full it must be put into the Cradle and turn'd towards the Fire The Nurse may sing with a soft Voice to lull it asleep rocking gently all the while If the Nurse be cleanly and mind her Business she will shift the Child three or four times a Day or oftener Every thing about it ought to be clean and sweet clean soft Rags behind the Child's Ears and under the Armpits every time she opens it The Nurse must be very careful the Navel-String fall not off too soon before the Vessels be quite closed She ought always to keep a Bolster on the top of it with a Cloath wet in Vinegar and Water till it be wholly depress'd and as it were sunk inwards She ought to put upon the Mould of the Head under the Biggin another Compress to keep the Brain warm Above all let her be very careful not to suffer the Child to ●ry too much at first lest the Navel be forc'd outwards or a Rupture happen in the Groyn she may prevent it ●rying as much as possible by often turning it clean and dry and removing what may fright or grieve it which very often occasions fits of Convulsions in Children These Fits are so common among Children that no Nurse ought to be ignorant of their Symptoms and Method of Cure perhaps the following Account th●●rief may be of use to those that are willing to learn The Signs of Convulsion-Fits are the hanging backward of the Head insomuch that the hinder part of the Head seemeth to touch the Shoulders sometimes the Child's Head bends forward all of a sudden If the Child be