The biggest thing is to wash the hands!
Other sterile techniques, antibiotics and delivering the child if the membranes have been ruptured for too long also help.
Puerperal sepsis is highly contagious by touch. But in the 19th century, scientist Ignaz Semmelweis discovered that the disease wasn't a threat so long as people thoroughly washed their hands.
Puerperal fever (from the Latin puer, child), also called childbed fever, can develop into puerperal sepsis, which is a serious form of septicaemia contracted by a woman during or shortly after childbirth, miscarriage or abortion. If untreated, it is life-threatening. The most common infection causing puerperal fever is genital tract sepsis. Other types of infection that can lead to sepsis after childbirth include urinary tract infection, breast infection (mastitis) and respiratory tract infection (more common after anaesthesia due to lesions in the windpipe). Puerperal fever is now rare in the West due to improved hygiene during delivery, and deaths have been reduced by antibiotics.
full topic about of puerperal sepsis in which topic include first of all . definition, causes , sign and symptoms , medical management , treatment , prevention , lab investigations , complications , nursing management , health education about the puerperal sepsis .
The term puerperal infection refers to a bacterial infection following childbirth.
for you project here is your answer although the answer may be late. She died on the 5th September 1548, at Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, from what is thought to be puerperal fever or puerperal sepsis, also called childbed fever. (This is what killed Henry's thrid wife Jane Seymour)
Catharine Parr is believed to have died from Puerperal Sepsis (also called Childbed fever) after giving birth to her daughter Mary Seymour.Puerperal fever is a common infection among birthing mothers; and can be fatal. With modern medicine it is easily treated; but in the 16th century there was no effective treatment for it.
Catherine gave birth to her only child - a daughter, Mary Seymour - on 30 August 1548, but Catherine died only six days later, on 5 September 1548, at Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, from what is thought to be puerperal fever or puerperal sepsis, also called childbed fever.
Sepsis is an infection of the blood, and occur more often to those with weak immune systems. To build one's immune system, increase anti-oxidents like blueberries, green tea, and plenty of vegetables and fruits rich in vitamin A and C. To help to prevent getting sepsis, having a strong immune system, keep wounds clean and clear of infection, and to have blood work done to detect sepsis.
Sepsis (from greek Σήψις, sepsis, "rot")
is there any cure for sepsis
Sepsis in infection of your blood. You would have to have a lung infection that turned into sepsis that would be how.
Sepsis nigripes was created in 1826.