[3] He used his authority to support inducing premature labour in cases of narrow pelvis and other conditions in England (where the mother's life is imperiled by delivery at the full-time).
He was the first physician whose authority made the practice general in England of inducing premature labour in cases of narrow pelvis and other conditions, in which the mother's life is imperilled by the attempt to deliver at the full-time.
[1] There are three volumes of the Diaries of John Knyveton edited by Ernest Gray, published between 1937 and 1946, that are clearly based on the life of Thomas Denman, although they do not state this.
[4] Denman died at his town house in Mount Street, London, 26 November 1815, and was buried in the St. James' Church in Piccadilly.
Thomas had an elder brother who was also a doctor and published a book called Treatise on Buxton Water: he married an heiress.