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Algebra: Structure And Method, Book 1
(REV)00th Edition
ISBN:9780395977224
Author:Richard G. Brown, Mary P. Dolciani, Robert H. Sorgenfrey, William L. Cole
Publisher:Richard G. Brown, Mary P. Dolciani, Robert H. Sorgenfrey, William L. Cole
Chapter2: Working With Real Numbers
Section2.3: Rules For Addition
Problem 7P
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Twenty Seconds
In the 1800s, childbirth was a much more complicated matter than it is now, with many
women dying during or soon after childbirth. Many doctors were stumped as to why so
many women were dying and named the unknown illness as "childbirth fever."
At the time, Dr. Semmelweis was Chief Resident in the maternity clinic at Vienna
General Hospital and stepped in to try and figure out what was going on. What put
Semmelweis on the right path was observing that in one ward of the hospital it was
mostly doctors who took care of childbirth, while in the other it was mostly midwives. In
the doctors' ward around 10% of women died of the "childbirth fever", while
only 4% died in the midwives' one.
Semmelweis realized that the doctors were going from one patient to the next, one
surgery to the next, and even sometimes from autopsies directly to childbirth - all
without washing their hands in between. In the midwives' ward, they were washing their
hands more frequently with a chemical similar to our current day bleach.
After then, Semmelweis ordered doctors to wash their hands in between every patient.
The difference was stark: in April 1847 the doctors' ward's death rate was 18.7%, and
once they implemented hand washing the rate went down to 2.2% by June 1847.
Unfortunately for Semmelweis, many peers rejected his proposition and mocked him,
carrying on with their non-hand-washing ways and compromising the lives of many more
people. It wasn't until the 1850s that people started washing their hands properly.
Today, we know without a doubt that bacteria and viruses exist, and now more than ever
we need to make sure to wash our hands regularly for at least 20 seconds.
Transcribed Image Text:Twenty Seconds In the 1800s, childbirth was a much more complicated matter than it is now, with many women dying during or soon after childbirth. Many doctors were stumped as to why so many women were dying and named the unknown illness as "childbirth fever." At the time, Dr. Semmelweis was Chief Resident in the maternity clinic at Vienna General Hospital and stepped in to try and figure out what was going on. What put Semmelweis on the right path was observing that in one ward of the hospital it was mostly doctors who took care of childbirth, while in the other it was mostly midwives. In the doctors' ward around 10% of women died of the "childbirth fever", while only 4% died in the midwives' one. Semmelweis realized that the doctors were going from one patient to the next, one surgery to the next, and even sometimes from autopsies directly to childbirth - all without washing their hands in between. In the midwives' ward, they were washing their hands more frequently with a chemical similar to our current day bleach. After then, Semmelweis ordered doctors to wash their hands in between every patient. The difference was stark: in April 1847 the doctors' ward's death rate was 18.7%, and once they implemented hand washing the rate went down to 2.2% by June 1847. Unfortunately for Semmelweis, many peers rejected his proposition and mocked him, carrying on with their non-hand-washing ways and compromising the lives of many more people. It wasn't until the 1850s that people started washing their hands properly. Today, we know without a doubt that bacteria and viruses exist, and now more than ever we need to make sure to wash our hands regularly for at least 20 seconds.
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Algebra: Structure And Method, Book 1
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