<P> Until the concluding decades of the 19th century, an experienced nurse midwife, who was considered to be knowledgeable about the birth process, typically helped to deliver a woman's baby . Birth typically took place in the home, and it was considered to be an event for females . It was a time for female friends and relatives to come into the home and care for the mother, her household, provide reassurance, and offer guidance . Birth was not considered to be a private event, but more of a social one, that also could create a strong bond among the participants and supporting attendees . </P> <P> Physicians there warned that it was dangerous not to receive modern medical attention while delivering children . They also stated one in every thirty women was expected to die because of a lack of medical attention . Due to these warnings, many women favored going into labor with a physician as opposed to a midwife . Physicians typically prohibited friends and relatives from participating or observing . The birth process may have been regarded as private or even embarrassing to the patient or the doctor and there were issues of preventing infection . Around 1910, some states began to outlaw the midwifery practice . Others enacted regulatory requirements which were difficult for many midwives to complete . Since the 1920s, physician assistance has been predominant during childbirth . However, since the 1960s midwifery has returned and grown in popularity and societal acceptance . Even during childbirth with a physician, it is now common for women to have their families, particularly their partners, in the delivery room with them . </P> <P> To help their wives prepare for childbirth, many male partners participate in specialized childbirth classes, such as Lamaze or Bradley method of natural childbirth . Men may give active assistance during childbirth by simply being present during his wife's labor or by coaching during childbirth . Many women find their partners' presence in the delivery room to be comforting . If he is present the man may be able to assist in making decisions that may be required at various junctures in the childbirth process (for example, regarding the use of epidural, accelerating delivery, dealing with medical problems and other matters). </P> <P> Until the early 1960s men were typically excluded from the labour room . However, during this decade there was an increasing pressure on hospitals to allow men into the labour room to provide support for their partners . It was only by the 1980s that it became common and expected that men would be present when their partners gave birth . The contemporary Australian experience is that men are expected to be present and support their partners . </P>

When did they start letting fathers in the delivery room