PSYCHOSOMATIC PROBLEMS IN POSTURAL RE-EDUCATION

PSYCHOSOMATIC PROBLEMS IN POSTURAL RE-EDUCATION

1088 fibres become brittle and easily break, forming fragments that are scattered and may convey infection whenever the bedding is disturbed. Syntheti...

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1088 fibres become brittle and easily break, forming fragments that are scattered and may convey infection whenever the bedding is disturbed. Synthetic fibre (’ Terylene ’) blankets stand up well to washing and sterilisation by boiling in the laundry. They are warm and comfortable in use, but objection has been made that they generate static electricity and In are therefore dangerous in the operation theatre. our view this is no disadvantage since, on bacteriological grounds alone, blankets should never be taken into the theatre. Moreover, it is not sufficiently appreciated that even wool has appreciable powers of generating static electricity. There are also several kinds of woven cotton material suitable for use as hospital blankets. One of these is turkish towelling. They too may be sterilised by boiling. We are now giving these different types of blanket ward trials, but it is yet too early for us to say how they stand up to long use, repeated sterilisation, and laundering. Public Health Laboratory, General Hospital,

Middlesbrough.

ROBERT BLOWERS J. POTTER K. R. WALLACE.

SiR,-It is indeed encouraging to find appearing almost

Dr. Leonard Colebrook’s article of Oct. 29 and Dr. W. F. Wells’s textbook.! Dr. Colebrook adds another chapter to the large volume of evidence incriminating airborne organisms in infections of wounds and burns. Fortunately the picture need not be so black as he paints it, for there is also a large volume of published evidence showing that airborne bactericides could be a potent weapon for reducing cross-infections. It is somewhat surprising that Dr. Colebrook should have made only passing reference to American work on glycol aerosols and omitted all reference to British work on phenolic aerosols.

simultaneously,

Apart from our own published work on air disinfection the Medical Research Council2 recommended the trial of heatvolatilised hexylresorcinol. Dickson3 and McGrath4 offer good evidence of its efficiency in reducing morbidity from aerial infections, and we have had verbal reports of reduced contamination-rates in plasma and ampoule filling rooms of hospitals, blood-transfusion centres, and commercial premises. McGrath’s results in the Dublin Zoo monkey house are the most striking in that morbidity from upper-respiratory infections " almost disappeared, and there has been no case of tuberculosis " following the introduction of resorcinol and subsequently hexylresorcinol aerosols ; and the position remains unchanged to date. These trials, extending now over six and a half years, seem to have passed unnoticed by the majority of English doctors. We suggest that the conditions in hospital practice are similar in many respects to those in McGrath’s cases, and that hexylresorcinol aerosols would be equally effective. Dr. MacKay, in his letter last week, mentions his work5 on hexylresorcinol and reiterates that thermal aerosol generators are relatively cheap and simple compared with air-conditioning plant.6 A high rate of kill (90-95% in five minutes) is a common finding in the laboratory. Removal of bacteria at such a rate by air changes would necessitate one air change every two minutes. This would cause great discomfort from draughts, and such rapid air movement might even increase the number of organisms reaching an operation wound or uncovered burn. It is open to question whether it would be in the best interest of patients to remain for long periods in bacteria-free air. The presence of dead or attenuated organisms such as occur in aerosol-treated atmospheres may have a prophylactic value. Aerosols again come into the picture with regard to the control of flies. The continuous-flow aerosol has hitherto been installed in over 50 hospitals in this country, and has proved remarkably successful. It is particularly suitable for -

1.

2.

Wells, W. F. Airborne Contagion and Air Hygiene. Cambridge, Mass., 1955. Studies in Air Hygiene. Spec. Rep. Ser. med. Res. Coun., Lond.

1948, no. 262 ; p. 314. Dickson, C. Irish J. med. Sci. 1953, p. 337. McGrath, J. Ibid, p. 343. MacKay, I. J. Hyg., Camb. 1952, 50, 82. 6. See also Baker, A. H. Lancet, 1954, i, 518, 3. 4. 5.

fly-control in wards, since it is silent, and needs no labour (and is therefore immune from the possibility of human failure, a major factor in pest-control) ; and as it dispenses only the pure insecticide the irritation which commonly results from carriers and solvents does not

occur.

Finally Dr. Colebrook, in his otherwise admirable survey of the sources of contamination, omits an importa,nt one-the cockroach. While no species of cockroach has yet been implicated as a disease vector it is generally accepted that it may, at times, be an important agent in the mechanical transmission of infection on food. The eradication of these insects is extremely difficult, but the installation of continuous-flow-aerosol equipment has given excellent long-term results and has often eliminated cockroach populations of both Blatta orientalis and The same installations are also Blattella germanica. effective

against flies.

Avebury Research Laboratories, Goring-on -Thames, Oxon.

A. H. BAKER F. G. SAREL WHITFIELD.

THE CLIMATE OF DISCOVERY

SiR,-Einstein stated that the most important thing in scientific work is intuition. Is this where art comes into both Science and Medicine, and can the difference between Professor Arnott (Oct. 15) and Sir Francis Walshe (Oct. 29) be resolved in this way? London,

J. W.1..j.

M. ALSTON.

PSYCHOSOMATIC PROBLEMS IN POSTURAL RE-EDUCATION

SIR,-I wonder if the profession, generally, realises the importance of Dr. Barlow’s article of Sept. 24. If doctors could get patients to master the principles which he stresses, it would go a long way to minimise the effects of the strain of everyday life. " Good posture " can be taught to the student or patient only by learning the fundamentals of muscle action, called the anatomy of movement. For any action to be carried out

perfectly, the activating muscles must function just after the contraction of the synergists and both these sets of muscles must work on already alerted prime fixers. three fundamental postures that the body can and passive. We divide the human frame arbitrarily into eight mobile parts attached to eight fixed parts : (1) the head on the neck and trunk ; (2) and (3) the shoulder girdle suspended by muscles from the skull, the cervical and dorsal spine, and the chest wall; (4) the trimk and pelvis ; (5) and (6) the pelvis on the hip-joints ; (7) and (8) the whole body on the ankles and feet. In active posture all the mobile parts are firmly attached to the fixed levels by the prime fixing muscles. The position adopted is that of the ape, and is a position of alertness. If we consider it in detail, it is the position taken up in conditions of stress and strain. The matador and the trapeze artist both adopt this position and it is one in which the prime fixing muscles are in slight contraction but the other muscles are in balanced relaxation. Scandinavian countries are now teaching relaxed posture. This stipulates that in the-erect position the prime fixers are all fixed and the patient, as Dr. Barlow says, stands as tall as possible, so that he takes all the body-weight off his joints. The simile of the motor-car in which the tyres are pumped up, thus avoiding all strains on the rims of the wheels, chassis, and springs, is a good one. Inactive posture is completely the opposite and means that the person slumps, so that the weight of the mobile parts acts as a chronic strain on the fixed parts, and the symptoms of postural strain are produced. If we consider the eight levels at which this can occur, we can see that many of the ills of the body can be accounted for by incorrect posture or sudden movements performed off guard ; such symptoms may be headaches, pains in the neck, pains down the arms with brachial neuritis and capsulitis of the shoulders, low back pain with or without sciatica or pseudo-sciatica, pains in the buttock, and pains and aches in relation to flat feet. There

are

adopt-active, inactive,

1089 i

Passive posture is one of complete relaxation when lying down or resting back in a chair. The full weight of the dependent parts of the body is taken by the bed or chair, but the body must be supported in a neutral position-that is to say, for example, the head should not be twisted to one side. It is important to adopt active posture before actually moving ; otherwise, in moving from a passive to an active state, we fail to fix the prime fixers and we may do harm at one of these

levels.

,

I agree with Dr. Barlow that the restoration of balanced equilibrium to the body requires not a strengthening of muscles but an integration of intention. W. E. TUCKER. London, W’.l. ,. W. THE HEAF TUBERCULIN TEST

SiR,--As the multiple-puncture tuberculin

test is being may I advise those using the apparatus that, in order to obtain clearly defined results, it is essential to use sharp needles. The points of the needles supplied are satisfactory for about 2500 tests, ttiter which they should be sharpened. The old set of ueedles can be easily replaced by a new set which can be obtained from the manufacturers. The old ones may then be re-sharpened and will be ready to use again. In carrying out the test, it is important that in addition to the needles being sharp they must all penetrate the skin to a uniform depth. It will be appreciated that any bruising due to blunt points or uneven penetration of the needles can make the reading of the tests difficult in persons with low tuberculin sensitivity, for a positive result depends on the presence of at least four points of

used

more

extensively

palpable induration. Welsh National School of Medicine, Cardiff.

FREDERICK HEAF.

not my purpose to enter into any

SiR,-In view of the timely and helpful article by Dr. Maclean Smith (Oct. 29), some of your readers may be interested in the design of similar cards which have been in use in this unit during the past year for filing of literature references. The size and punching specifications of the cards are as described by Dr. Maclean Smith. The numbering at the upper edge provides for coded representation of subjectmatter, from 0000 to 9999-i.e., a total of ten thousand subjects, on a decimal system. Part of the lower edge is devoted to year of publication (indicated by its last two digits). Separ#te alphabetical panels numbered 1, 2, and 3 allow filing according to first, second, and third letters respectively of the author’s surname, the prefix Mac or Me being considered as a single letter. To save space, the alphabetical panels, especially panel 2, have been compressed by allocating more than one letter to some of the holes. The design of these compressed panels was worked out in such a way as to cause minimal ambiguity, by studying the frequency distribution of the letters of the alphabet in a large random series of surnames. Three holes at the right-hand margin specify (a) papers of which a reprint is held in the department, (b) general reviews of a major topic, and (c) papers consulted only by abstract. Three unlabelled holes on the lower edge may be used for other special classifications, according to individual preference. The upper left-hand corner is cut to aid alignment

during filing. The centre of the card contains spaces for title, up to four code references to subject-matter, author’s name, source, and year of publication, with a large vacant panel for a summary of the paper (continued, if necessary, on the reverse of the card).

The advantages of this card for may be briefly stated :

filing

of references

(1) References may be readily extracted from the file to subject, author, or year. Cards need not be filed in a particular order. (2) The use of the decimal system, though requiring more space than the 1, 2, 4, 7 notation mentioned by Dr. Maclean

according

PREVENTION OF GOITRE

SiR,—It is

MARGINAL-PUNCHED CARDS

lengthy

discussion of your leading article of July 16. However, I wish to reply to your statement " But writers of old may simply not have mentioned goitre." Do you mean to imply that British physicians before the eighteenth century were less observant or less likely to record their observations than were their colleagues in France, Germany, and Italy ? Moreover, as in Canada and New Zealand, European observers sometimes expressly stated

Smith, enables cards to be extracted by fewer operations of the stilette. (3) The design of the card allows more than one subject to be coded on the same card without confusion, and the names of two or more co-authors may be similarly recorded. Use of the first three letters of the surname rather than the initial letter only facilitates identification of the name.

that goitre was not present. You neglected to mention that, in Scrimshaw’s experiments, the goitres returned in a few weeks after iodine needicatio7z (5 mg. once a week per child) was stopped, although the salt in use contained as much iodine as you now recommend for use in Britain and four times as much as has been credited with marvellous results

Chatterson Co. Ltd., 50, Wellington Street, Glasgow, C.2. I am grateful to my colleagues in the unit for encouragement in the designing of the cards. I should be pleased to send a specimen card to anyone interested, and I should welcome suggestions for their improvement. Clinical Chemotherapeutic Research Unit,

elsewhere.

-

spite of the experiments of Axelrad, Leblond, and Isler, it still remains true that goitre has not been produced in animals upon a diet of purified food constituents and prevented by addition of small quantities of iodine. Finally, the prevalence of goitre began to diminish long before iodised salt was used. In Edmonton, Canada, it gradually decreased from 1820 or 1830 to its disappearance about 1870. It did not return for some forty years. In Switzerland, Piedmont, France, and the Argentine Republic, the decrease began about a century ago. In Switzerland, it was more marked among young men between 1905 and 1910 than in any similar period since the introduction of iodised salt. In the Argentine Republic, the diminution in the number of goitres had been so great that no separate enumeration was made in 1914, as there had been in 1869 and 1895. Truly, if one gets to work with a pail when the tide is running out, one may convince oneself that one is lowering the level of the ocean. In

the

New York University College of Medicine.

• ISIDOR GREENWALD.

The cards

were

supplied

to my

Western Infirmary, Glasgow, W.1.

specification by Copeland-

A. I. MACDOUGALL.

SiR,—I read Dr. Maclean Smith’s article with considerable interest, having myself used marginal-punched cards for a considerable number of years. My method, however, differs fundamentally from his because the coding is based on the fact that any number can be expressed uniquely as the sum of the powers of 2. 32 + 16 + 8 + 4 ; hence by taking 3 groups Thus, 60 =

of 5 holes, 60 would be coded as 0-5-123, according to the following numbering of the holes : Group 3 Group1 Group Z 1. 2. 3. 4 5.

16384 8192 4096 2048 1024

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

512 256 128 64 32

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

16 8 4 2 1

In the same way cancer of the stomach, M.R.C. code 1210 - -- 1024 + 128 + 32 + 16 + 8 + 2, can be coded as 5-35-124. In this way 14 holes gives 21L1 coding possibilities-i.e., 16383. This is more than adequate for the M.R.C. code. The arithmetic has to be done only once, the result being suitably recorded. Practice with a few examples will show its simplicity. The international statistical classification of diseases can be similarly coded. ’