kPa,

You can search for "Electronic Medical Records, EMR" at the Carle Clinic in 
Urbana, Illinois for information of the system used by all the doctors at the 
Clinic and accessed online by many of their patients. for answers to some of 
your questions.

Meanwhile, I'm trying to find a Glossary of Units of Measurement used in 
*common* by all members of the Physicians Group at the Carle Hospital and Carle 
Clinic in Urbana.

Eugene Mechtly
________________________________
From: Kilopascal [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, August 11, 2013 1:20 PM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: Re: [USMA:53147] my letter to Taylor Precision Products (sent as a 
consumer)

If telling them my statistics in metric and getting that blank stare isn't a 
hint to use metric, then persuading them to do it won't work.  You are just 
lucky to have a modern thinking doctor.  Do you know for sure if all the 
patients he has are measured in metric or is it just you?

If he is associated with a clinic it may be clinic policy.  Maybe elite clinics 
will tend to have more modern practices where as general practitioners tend to 
stick to the past.  I can't say.

I'd be curious to know if every patient who accesses his/her file sees the same 
metric information as you do or do they have an option to switch to USC?  Are 
you viewing SI because you chose to view your statistics in SI?  If there is a 
choice, what is the default?

Do they actually do the measuring in SI and enter it in everybody's file in 
metric or does the computer read directly from the scale?  Does the nurse or 
doctor attempt to interpret the metric scale reading in USC for you as I'm sure 
they would for everybody else or would constantly be ask what that is in 
'merican.



From: mechtly, eugene a<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, 2013-08-11 12:07
To: Kilopascal<mailto:[email protected]> ; U.S. Metric 
Association<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: mechtly, eugene a<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [USMA:53147] my letter to Taylor Precision Products (sent as a 
consumer)

kPa,

The nurse in my doctor's office *always* measures and records my mass in 
kilograms and my height in centimeters.

The digital file of my own personal medical records at the Carle Clinic, which 
I can access by password, is also 100% in SI units although not always in the 
most coherent of SI units. e.g. centimeters rather than meters, and grams or 
milliliters per deciliter of blood serum, but I don't complain about the 
absence of the most coherent of SI units!

You should persuade your doctors and nurses to *upgrade to SI units* instead of 
complaining that they measure and record in USC units!

Eugene Mechtly
________________________________
From: Kilopascal [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, August 11, 2013 7:39 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:53147] my letter to Taylor Precision Products (sent as a 
consumer)

When I go to the doctor, he doesn't weight me.  His nurse or assistant does.  
She asks me what my height and weight are and when I give it to her in metres 
and kilograms, she asks me again what it is in USC.  When I say I don't know, 
she puts me on the scale and reads my weight and height and records that.

I'm sure the majority of doctors, if not all, in the US measure and record 
patients height and weight in USC, never metric.  That is why there are dosing 
errors and will continue to be.  These dosing errors are not enough to force 
the doctors and nurses to measure and record in metric.  I believe Americans 
would chose death and injury due to misdosing over having to use metric.  
Otherwise this problem would have been corrected ages ago instead of 
perpetuating.

Luckily for me I am not in need of any medications.  So I'm not a candidate for 
misdosing.

[USMA:53147] my letter to Taylor Precision Products (sent as a 
consumer)<http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]&q=subject:%22%5BUSMA%3A53147%5D+my+letter+to+Taylor+Precision+Products+%28sent+as+a+consumer%29%22>

Paul 
Trusten<http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]&q=from:%22Paul+Trusten%22>
 Sat, 10 Aug 2013 18:31:17 
-0700<http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]&q=date:20130810>

I am delighted with my purchase of your Taylor Digital Bath Scale, Model 7562!
It is an attractive addition to my bathroom, and I appreciate the LED readout
so the scale can be read in any light. However, I was disappointed to discover
that the measurement units defaulted to pounds, and I had to stop and set it to
read out in kilograms. I was born and raised right here in the USA, but I think
metric is the way to go now. Why not have your scale start there? And, it also
makes it easier for doctors to dose some medications if people can conveniently
report their weight to them in kilograms.

Thanks,

Paul Trusten



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