Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway

Since 1947 there has been a common understanding among Norwegian historians and demographers that stillbirths registered in the country prior to 1839 included infants who were born alive but died within 24 hours. This paper shows that a revision of this definition is necessary. During the first half...

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Main Author: Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute of Social History 2021-03-01
Series:Historical Life Course Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openjournals.nl/index.php/hlcs/article/view/9575
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author Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
author_facet Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
author_sort Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
collection DOAJ
description Since 1947 there has been a common understanding among Norwegian historians and demographers that stillbirths registered in the country prior to 1839 included infants who were born alive but died within 24 hours. This paper shows that a revision of this definition is necessary. During the first half of the 19th century, several memoranda, revisions and circulars were distributed by the Danish-Norwegian authorities — and Norwegian authorities after 1814 —, with the purpose of collecting and then improving the registration of stillbirths. After a close reading of these documents, I find no indication that the '24 hours of life' limit was explicitly included in the definition of stillbirths at any time prior to 1839. Instead, 'first day deaths' were given a separate column in the registration forms returned by the priests, midwives and district medical officers who recorded vital events. However, the design of these forms was inconsistent between 1806 and 1831.
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spelling doaj-art-f637cf96e46a473eb8e8a24a40b8bdf82025-02-02T08:43:24ZengInternational Institute of Social HistoryHistorical Life Course Studies2352-63432021-03-011010.51964/hlcs9575Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in NorwayHilde Leikny SommersethSince 1947 there has been a common understanding among Norwegian historians and demographers that stillbirths registered in the country prior to 1839 included infants who were born alive but died within 24 hours. This paper shows that a revision of this definition is necessary. During the first half of the 19th century, several memoranda, revisions and circulars were distributed by the Danish-Norwegian authorities — and Norwegian authorities after 1814 —, with the purpose of collecting and then improving the registration of stillbirths. After a close reading of these documents, I find no indication that the '24 hours of life' limit was explicitly included in the definition of stillbirths at any time prior to 1839. Instead, 'first day deaths' were given a separate column in the registration forms returned by the priests, midwives and district medical officers who recorded vital events. However, the design of these forms was inconsistent between 1806 and 1831.https://openjournals.nl/index.php/hlcs/article/view/9575StillbirthsRegistration practiceEarly 19th centuryVital statistics
spellingShingle Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway
Historical Life Course Studies
Stillbirths
Registration practice
Early 19th century
Vital statistics
title Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway
title_full Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway
title_fullStr Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway
title_full_unstemmed Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway
title_short Born Dead or Alive? Revisiting the Definition of Stillbirths in Norway
title_sort born dead or alive revisiting the definition of stillbirths in norway
topic Stillbirths
Registration practice
Early 19th century
Vital statistics
url https://openjournals.nl/index.php/hlcs/article/view/9575
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