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ARTICLE |

STERILIZE THE THERMOMETER

Richard E. Stifel, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;73(15):1152-1153. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610410054031.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —In view of the possible return of influenza, may I call attention to a matter of hygiene which all consider of importance: I refer particularly to the necessity of thorough sterilization of the fever thermometer.It is unfortunately still the custom in many hospitals to sterilize thermometers by standing them upright in a solution of mercuric chlorid, phenol (carbolic acid) or alcohol, a solution which is often not deep enough to cover more than half the length of the tube. Before use, each thermometer is hastily wiped off in one motion with a piece of gauze or cotton, starting at the top, the unclean end.While our knowledge of influenza is what it is, it seems important that we should work and plan on the basis of things known. We know that the pathologic process in the lungs is partly due to gram-positive organisms variously reported staphylococci,

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