Permanent record

2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 348-351
Author(s):  
Mark Brogan
Keyword(s):  
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 612-613
Author(s):  
ROBERT C. WOODY

The increasing availability of videorecording cameras and cassette recorders now permits the visual documentation of medical events in children at home by parents. On two occasions recently, we asked families to videorecord their children's presumed seizure activity at home. In the first case, a 10-month-old white boy had frequent "spells" which by history appeared to be complex partial seizures. Routine awake and asleep EEG tracings were normal, and the family resisted hospital admission for financial reasons. Anticonvulsant medications were prescribed, and the family suggested that they borrow their parent's videocassette recorder to document their son's spells at home. Their videorecordings produced a high quality, permanent record of definite complex partial symptom activity clearly revealing eye deviation, nystagmus, and associated head and arm tonic activity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Hesselberg ◽  
Daniel Simonsen

Studies on the behaviour of subterranean animals are rare, mainly due to the problems with collecting data in these inaccessible habitats. Web-building cave spiders, however, leave a semi-permanent record of their foraging behaviour, which can relatively easily be recorded. In this study, we compare size, leg lengths and web characteristics between hypogean populations of Metellina merianae with its close wood-inhabiting relative M. mengei. We confirm previous observations that M. merianae does not show any obvious morphological and behavioural adaptions to a subterranean life-style, although individuals of the cave species were significantly larger and had webs with relatively fewer radii and capture spiral turns than M. mengei. We were, however, not able to determine if these findings indicate a transition towards behavioural adaptation to caves or if they are a result of behavioural flexibility in response to the different humidity and temperature between caves and woodland. Finally, we did not find any effect of cave characteristics on either the number of radii or the area of the M. merianae web.


1958 ◽  
Vol 104 (435) ◽  
pp. 302-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Humphry Osmond ◽  
Abram Hoffer
Keyword(s):  

Nowadays when clinicians feel happier guided by methodologists and statisticians, only the brash or the sophisticated care to report single cases in detail. Yet medicine has in the past profited greatly by careful observations of this sort, and so good is this precedent that we have decided to defy fashion and report the affair of Mr. Kovish, one of those curious happenings which, we think, deserves a permanent record.


1970 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 244-249
Author(s):  
Daniel M Marmion

Abstract DSC is a rapid and sensitive tool for the determination of the melting point, moisture content, purity, and heat of fusion of certifiable colors. The relative stability and the identification of the colorants may also be deduced from the thermograms. The procedures outlined require only a few milligrams of sample and provide a permanent record. Attempts to obtain similar information for natural color additives were unsuccessful due to the inability to obtain reproducible thermograms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
James Houston ◽  
Luke Ashby ◽  
Jonathan Ogidi ◽  
Daren F Lui ◽  
Alex J Trompeter

Open fractures incur significant morbidity and mortality, and as such have standardised guidelines for their management. Photography of open fractures is an essential component of documentation in the treatment of open fractures as per the British Orthopaedic Association Standards of Trauma and National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines. Smartphones have made photography easily accessible to the clinician, but serious concerns exist regarding data security and the consent process around the use of sensitive clinical images. This project sought to overcome this issue by developing a Caldicott-compliant hospital imaging protocol that allows clinicians to use their smartphone to upload open fracture images into the patient's permanent record. Implementation of the protocol was audited and resulted in the increase of safe and secure open fracture photographic storage to inpatient medical records. This protocol would be transferrable to other hospital trusts and could be adopted across major trauma networks.


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