Carl Linnaeus, The Lapland Journey, translated by Peter Graves (Edinburgh: Lockharton Press, 1995), p. 172.
TorneĆ„, 10/08/1732, ¶953:
From the dean’s wife I learned how to prevent the afterpains so effectively that they are scarcely felt. When the first child is born and the umbilical cord is cut, a little of the blood is taken in a spoon and drunk by the mother. This is repeated at each and every childbirth and in this way the pains after the birth, which are more severe for many women than those at the birth itself, disappear.