In 1847, Semmelweis’s colleague Dr. Jacob Kolletschka cut himself with a scalpel while performing an autopsy. He was soon febrile and septic; Semmelweis could hardly help but notice that Kolletschka’s symptoms mirrored those of the women with childbed fever. Here, then, was a potential answer: the first clinic was run by surgeons and medical students who shuttled casually between the pathology department and the maternity ward—from performing cadaver dissections and autopsies straight to delivering babies. In contrast, the second clinic was run by midwives, who had no contact with cadavers and
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