Textbook
Overview for
Myles
Textbook for Midwives Eleventh Edition
By
Megan Scott
The
diagrams and illustrations in this book are amazing. It is very
helpful to be able to picture what you reading about, and Myles
does and excellent job of providing helpful diagrams along side
the detailed explanations. The down to earth descriptions in this
book are very refreshing. With so many medical text books you can get
so lost in technical jargon that you miss the whole point of what you
are reading. With Myles you get an explanation that actually
makes sense, and can be practically applied.
This
textbook is very useful to both beginner students and advanced
students. For beginners this book offers a very comprehensive
introduction into midwifery care, and for more advanced students it
is useful for reviewing something quickly. While still being
instructive, and not “dumbing down” the information, Myles
is written in plain, easy to comprehend, English.
Topics
covered in this edition of Myles include: how to conduct
prenatals, malpresentations (and how to deal with them), nutritional
guides for the pregnant woman, what a normal pregnancy looks like,
abnormalities of pregnancy and labor, and much more. A particularly
interesting section of this text book explains the laws that regulate
midwifery in Great Britain.
The
chapter on malpresentations is very informative, and detailed. It is
broken down into separate sections for each presentation, and then
outlines the full mechanism of labor for that position. In addition
it explains the common reasons for the malpresentation, the most
likely outcome, and has diagrams many showing how the presentation
looks and feels from different angles. For example, occipitoposterior
positions may be associated with an abnormally shaped pelvis. Out
comes of an OP position are not all the same. Sometimes the baby will
rotate before birth and be born in an anterior presentation. Other
malpresentations covered in this chapter include, face, brow, and all
of the varying breech presentations.
The first
publication of Myles textbook for Midwives was
published in 1953, and was written by Margaret Myles. The next nine
printings were also solely written by Mrs. Myles. The eleventh
edition is the first multiauthor version. Ruth
Bennett and Linda Brown were the joint editors, and co-ordinated a
team of midwives, and a physiotherapist to make this edition
possible.
The
eleventh edition of Myles Midwifery has a very comprehensive
index, but is lacking a glossary. The attention to detail, and the
organization, of this book is very helpful for studying. It is very
easy to look up a specific topic, and if it is covered, you wont have
any trouble finding its location.
In
conclusion, Myles Textbook for Midwives is a very thorough
volume of information, and should be included in every midwifery
students education.
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