It standardized a critical moment
The score was quick enough for a busy delivery room and clear enough to be recorded consistently. That made newborn condition easier to compare across patients, clinicians, and institutions.
Timeline Entry
In 1953, Virginia Apgar published a simple method for evaluating newborn condition immediately after birth. The score gave delivery teams a shared way to record heart rate, breathing, muscle tone, reflex response, and colour.
The Apgar score matters because it turned the first minutes of life into a repeatable clinical assessment, linking obstetric anaesthesia, neonatal resuscitation, records, and public-health research.
Historical Significance
The score was quick enough for a busy delivery room and clear enough to be recorded consistently. That made newborn condition easier to compare across patients, clinicians, and institutions.
Apgar's system helped clinicians ask how maternal drugs, delivery technique, and resuscitation affected newborn vitality.
Repeated scoring helped connect bedside observation to research on outcomes, safety, and the changing organization of newborn care.
Reading Path
Read this entry with Virginia Apgar, History of Obstetrics and Midwifery, History of Anaesthesia, and History of Public Health.