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It is our forward looking ambition to develope

a technician network. This requires personal

time to invest in other peoples problems and

solutions; and as I approach retirement age,

I believe I will have the time. If you have the

 interest and time, please read the following

article.

How to Network

from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit
You've probably heard the phrase "It's not what you

know, it's who you know." In today's interconnected

society, that rings true more than ever. Your talents,

 abilities, and experience will never take you

anywhere if nobody knows you exist. In order to get

 what you want out of life, you need to

be resourceful, and one of your vastest, richest

resources are your fellow human beings.

Steps

  1. Break your stereotypes about networking.
  2.  If you're reading this article, you're probably
  3.  familiar with the benefits of networking, but
  4.  you've avoided doing it for a variety of
  5.  reasons.
    • Networking can seem insincere,
    • pretentious, or even manipulative.
    •  And if that's what you're thinking,
    •  you're probably right... about some
    •  of it. There will always be people
    •  who judge others based on image
    •  and titles, but there are also people
    •  who want to build genuine, mutually
    •  beneficial relationships. When
    •  you're networking, you're going to
    •  have to sift through the people you
    •  don't want to know to get to the
    •  people you do want to know. That's
    •  just an essential part of networking,
    •  but the good news is that with practice,
    •  you'll get better at spotting the
    •  people worth knowing.
    • You might think you're too shy or
    •  self-conscious to schmooze. Networking
    •  does requires a degree of boldness,
    •  but with the advent of social networking
    •  sites, you can get to find others with
    •  similar interests and goals without being
    •  in a room full of people. Also, people
    •  who are shy and self-conscious tend to
    •  be a lot more open and talkative when
    •  they're doing or talking about something
    •  they're deeply interested in. If you find
    •  people who are just as obsessed with
    •  birding, origami, or manga as you are,
    •  then you'll have a much easier time
    •  establishing connections.
    • Networking takes time and effort. Unless
    •  you're an extroverted person who
    •  thoroughly enjoys schmoozing, it can
    •  be exhausting. Why bother? Well, one
    •  way to think of it is to imagine how
    •  much time and frustration you would
    •  save if anything you wanted or needed
    •  was just one or two phone calls away.
    •  Ultimately, a network can be an
    •  investment, with benefits that outweigh
    •  the costs.[1] You just need to stick
    •  with it and watch it grow.
  6. Build your social network. If you hate small
  7.  talk, this will be the hardest part, but you'll
  8.  improve with practice. The key is to smile and
  9.  take a genuine interest in other people's lives.
    • Strengthen your existing connections.
    •  Getting in touch with old friends, distant
    •  relatives, and people you went to school
    •  with can be a good stepping stone
    •  because you're reaching out, but you're
    •  not approaching complete strangers.
    • [2] Give them a phone call or send them
    •  an e-mail to find out where they are and
    •  what they're doing. Tell them what you're
    •  up to.
    • Pursue interests and activities that mean
    •  a lot to you. The Internet has made this
    •  a whole lot easier. Check forums,
    •  listings, classifieds, and Internet mailing
    •  lists (known as "listservs") for local
    •  events or meetings that are likely to
    •  attract people with similar interests or
    •  passions.
    • Go to work-related conferences. Print out
    •  business cards and give out as many as
    • you can. Ask the people you meet for
    •  their business cards, and write any
    •  details about them on the back once
    •  you have a moment to spare.
  10. Find out who knows who. When you're talking
  11.  to people, find out what they do for a living
  12.  and for fun, as well as what their spouse or
  13.  significant other, nearby family members, and
  14.  close friends do for work and recreation, too.
  15.  It may be helpful to make note of this in your
  16.  address book so you don't lose track of who
  17.  does what.
    • Example: You meet Mary at a book club
    •  meeting and you find out that her
    •  cousin is an expert windsurfer. A few
    •  months later, your niece reveals to you
    •  that one of her life's goals is to go
    •  windsurfing. Instead of scratching your
    •  head and thinking "I know somebody
    •  mentioned windsurfing recently but I
    •  can't remember who..." you look at
    •  your address book, find "windsurfing
    •  cousin" written next to Mary's name,
    •  call her up and ask her if her cousin
    •  is available to give your niece a private
    •  lesson, that you want to give that to
    •  her as a birthday gift. Mary says "Sure!"
    •  and convinces her cousin to give you a
    •  discount. Your niece is thrilled. A month
    •  later, your car breaks down, and you
    •  remember that your niece's boyfriend
    •  is an aspiring auto mechanic...
    • Find the extroverts. As you continue to
    •  network, you'll find that some people
    •  are much better it at than you
    •  are - they already know everyone!
    •  You'll stand to benefit from getting to
    •  know such people first because they
    •  can introduce you to others who share
    •  your interests or goals. In other words,
    •  if you're an introvert, find an extrovert
    • who can "set you up".
  18. Invite people out. Going out for lunch, beer,
  19.  drinks, or coffee is usually good for catching
  20.  up casually. You can also invite people to do
  21.  things related to your interests. If you met
  22.  someone at a caving club, why don't you ask
  23.  them to check out a new cave with you? The
  24.  objective here is to establish a connection
  25.  beyond your initial meeting. Preferably, this
  26.  should be one-on-one.
  27. Be generous. Since you're looking to create
  28.  mutually beneficial relationships, a good way
  29.  to kick start this is by thinking of ways in which
  30.  you can help others. It's not all about contacts,
  31.  job offers, and loans; you can offer compliments,
  32.  good listening skills, and other less tangible
  33.  (but valuable) gestures of kindness and
  34.  generosity.[3] As long as you're sincere,
  35.  you're establishing good relations with people
  36.  and opening channels for mutual benefit. The
  37.  girl who was crying on your shoulder last
  38.  month might get you the job of your
  39.  dreams next month. You never know,
  40.  so place your bets on good karma. What
  41. goes around, comes around.
  42. Follow up. Don't get someone's business
  43.  card or e-mail address and forget about it.
  44.  Find a way to stay in touch. Maintain your
  45. network. Whenever you find an article that
  46.  might be of interest to them, for instance,
  47.  send it on their way. If you hear about a
  48.  negative event (a tornado, a riot, an electrical
  49.  blackout) that happened in their vicinity, call
  50.  them and make sure they're fine. Keep track of
  51.  everyone's birthday and mark them on a
  52.  calender; be sure to send birthday cards to
  53.  everyone you know, along with a nice note to
  54.  let them know you haven't forgotten about
  55.  them, and that you don't want them to forget
  56.  about you.
  57. Tap into your network. The next time you need
  58.  something (a job, a date, a hiking partner) cast
  59.  a wide net and see what happens. Make a few
  60. phone calls or send out an e-mail describing your
  61.  situation in a friendly tone: "Hey, I'm in a bit of
  62.  a pinch. I have these concert tickets for Saturday
  63.  and I haven't been able to find someone to go
  64.  with me. Since this is a band I love, I'd like to
  65.  go with someone I know I'll have fun with. Do
  66.  you know of anyone who might enjoy it with
  67.  me?"
    • Don't ever apologize when asking for
    •  a favor or help. It can signal a lack of
    • confidence and professionalism.
    • [4] There's nothing to be sorry
    •  about--you're just seeing if anyone
    •  happens to be in a position to help
    •  you; you're not making demands, or
    •  forcing people to do anything that they
    •  don't want to do.

Tips

  • Start small. Don't sign up for 12 meetings in
  •  one month. A sustained effort over the long
  •  run is better than making a big effort and then
  •  burning out. Remember that networking
  •  requires maintenance, so don't bite off more
  •  than you can chew.
  • It always helps to look approachable and
  •  be charming.
  • Can't find a local club or group relating to
  • your interests or career? Start one!

Warnings

  • If you've never networked, it'll be hard at first.
  •  Very hard. But over time, it'll get easier.
  •  Eventually you'll learn how to
  • start a conversation with a complete stranger
  •  in a way that feels comfortable and acceptable
  •  to you.
  • Watch out for parasites - people who'll pump
  •  you for favors and never try to help you in
  •  return. When you find one attached to you
  •  (and if you're generous, you will) turn them
  •  down as politely as you can: "No, I'm sorry,
  •  I can't do that tomorrow. I've got plans." If
  • they try to make you feel guilty, feign an
  •  excuse to get out of the conversation and
  •  make yourself scarce to them. Don't lose your
  •  temper or act cold because that'll give them
  •  something negative to say about you when
  •  they're talking to others, like "Oh, yes I know
  •  James, he once called me a leech..." - don't let
  •  this happen to you.

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

  1. http://www.businesspundit.com/how-to-network-for-introverts/
  2.                         how-to-network-for-introverts/
  3. http://www.cio.com/article/164300
  4. http://www.cio.com/article/164300
  5. http://www.cio.com/article/164300

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project

 to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual.

 Please edit this article and find author credits at the

 original wikiHow article on How to Network. All content

 on wikiHow can be shared under a

 Creative Commons license.

 

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RFB

7-23-2007

 

Request For Bid

Product Manufacturer Needed for - Health and Hygiene

GTG Inc, a non-profit Texas corporation is seeking a manufacturer to produce products to sell on the internet at our web sites. The product desired is simular to the alcohol prep pads used by medical staff to prepare sites on patients for injection. The chemical we request in our product is not alcohol. It is a common chemical not available in this format but needed by hospital staff to sanitize medical equipment that has biohazardous material on it from patients the equipment has been used on.

 

The successful bidder should be a manufacturer that has manufactured products like alcohol prep pads or hand sanitizer wipes packaged individually for one time use.

 

A good information proposal from a manufacturer should include proposals: of finacial stability, scalability, ability to label products with information necessary to market world wide, the ability to develope web site advertisements,  and order forms that include drop shipments to customer.

 

We believe this to be a new product with an untapped market. We would like to discuss licensing sale of product to any vendor for a percentage of gross sales.

 

CONTACT: Norman Frazier, CEO GTG Inc, at nfrazier@mygtg.org or at USA phone number 903/844-2133


Editorial: Networking

 

To Be Or Not To Be

 

I believe that Shakespeare’s Hamlet had a choice between two or more proactive courses and was contemplating them, not the fatalist view that Hamlet was thinking of not being.

The Biomedical Engineering Departments in our nation’s hospitals know that the fatal question is being contemplated. The best choice should be between two or more proactive courses.

The state that we find Biomed in today is as a lot of isolated groups of technical people scattered across the country. Everybody is trying to do the same job with no clue as to how one’s peers are working.

Problems present themselves and are solved by brilliant technical people in a vacuum. This results in the ‘wheel’ being reinvented many times over.

Could Biomeds benefit from networking? I think we could. What is the downside? A Biomed Department that has a really good method of handling a problem would share it with their peers and everyone would adapt the best solution. The originator of the solution might not even be thanked for his work. What is new with that?

Possibly a Biomed Department would adopt all the good methods and move to the forefront as the best Biomed Department in the country. So what, the only ones looking at what we are doing is our own hospital’s administration. What’s bad about becoming the best in the country in the eye’s of our own administration? Biomed Departments are not competing against each other. We are competing on an uneven playing field within our own organizations. We are a service group and fair or not we don’t shine in the presents of revenue generating departments.

The big downside is I have the ‘big head’ about the way I do things. I have worked for weeks making an original ‘failed equipment tag’ along with a written policy for the safety committee to approve. I have designed it and gone through the pain of having the director mark out my ideas and note the way he wants it till the only thing left of my original work is the international style icon I suggested putting on the tag and that was changed a couple of times. It’s my project and I accomplished it.

Well it would have been better and easier if I had networked with other Biomeds and reviewed five or six tags from other hospitals and then my director could have picked and chosen between the best in the country. Right now my tag is being used till someone comes along, possibly a department manager in the safety committee that doesn’t like the tag. The hospital they worked at before has a better tag and they can get an example of it. I worked six weeks on that tag and had the printer do it custom and worked out the problems with having Material Management stock it so the departments could order it. I should have networked.

Shouldn’t we all network?

What is the upside? Time management is our mode of operation. If we don’t manage our time well we will be buried in work. The time I would have spent networking as compared to the six weeks I spent inventing the ‘wheel’ is an example of improved time management.

Better selection from a large field of examples improves the final results. What if everyone in the country used the same tag? Well we wouldn’t have to pay for custom tags.

What if we just keep doing things the same old way? Well then, we could be back to contemplating that old question, ‘To be or not to be?’


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Webpage is what You make it!

A dependable site for networking with Biomedical Engineers, Clinical Engineers, and Biomedical Technicians. A public bulletin board for getting directions and a private bulletin board for discussions about confidential information.

Dependable databases for medical equipment technical service manuals, reviews of cutting edge technology, and educational material.

Parts for medical equipment with group buying power. If needed, drop shipping storage, for storing parts purchased in quantity as spares.

Most biomed departments in hospitals do not have space to store: parts, manuals, and supplies.

Here are some useful definitions:

Biomedical Engineering is a major course of study at engineering colleges and universities with emphasis on genetic engineering, and biological, chemical, pharmacological, physicological, and industrial engineering.
Biomedical Engineering Department is (1) an educational department within a higher education facility, also (2) a medical hospital department responsible for all medical equipment used within the hospital.
A Biomedical Engineer is (1) a person licensed by a government to practice engineering, also (2) a person employed by a hospital to maintain medical equipment used by doctors and nurses in the hospital to diagnose and treat patients, also called: Clinical Engineers, Biomeds, CBETs, BMETs, IMETs, and generally Biomedical Engineering Technicians. NOTE - The licensed engineers are equatable to military officers and the technicians to noncoms or enlisted people, in fact many Biomeds get their training from military tech schools and practice in military hospitals.
Medical Equipment is anything used by a doctor or nurse to diagnose and treat patients.

 




 

 Custom Search for Biomed Topics

Tips and Helpful Hints

  • Decontaminating Medical Equipment of Biohazardous Material
  • Observe the Problem
  • Editorial: Networking 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tips and Helpful Hints

Biomedical Study, Antiseptic Agent

 

Contents

 

Work Information  

RTSC presents information you can't live without.

 

Practice 

 

De-Contaminating Medical Equipment for the Biomed Technician's safety isn't just a good idea; it is an imperative. Surgical equipment can be contaminated with dangerous medical bio-hazards.

Some of the things I am speaking of are virus agents carried in smoke generated from surgical laser procedures to remove warts. The virus has been cultured on staff and items present in surgery during procedures to remove vaginal warts. I discovered this while attending laser school in Santa Clara CA. I called my hospital and informed them of the risk and suggested a vendor to supply protective equipment.

Some of the bio-hazards survive steam autoclave sterilization. Surgical instruments on loan to a hospital in Denver, infected a patient with CJD a particularly nasty form of encephalitis. According to the alert article the instruments were loaned by the manufacturer and had been sterilized. 

It is not just surgery that can contaminate equipment. Hemodialysis machines can be contaminated with such agents as Hepatitis, HIV, and Streptococcus. For years I have used a solution of water and bleach to disinfect or sanitize dialysis equipment. One part of bleach to ten parts of tap water is the solution consistency. I have never had a problem with this procedure on surfaces. However there are places inside machines that can be damaged by this solution, namely reverse osmosis membranes, some plastic and all metal parts. In the case of membranes, it is better to dispose of them and replace them with new ones. Plastic and metal parts (not aluminium) can tolerate twenty minute exposure if rinsed thoroughly afterwards. Twenty minutes is the recommended dwell time for this disinfectant to sanitize hemodialysis equipment.

I have developed confidence in this bleach solution and was not surprised to learn that the US Army uses it to decontaminate BNC (Biological, Nuclear, and Chemical) contaminated equipment and personnel. I research the solution and found some interesting information under the heading of Dakin Solution. This is a remarkable story of discovery and application of a miraculous treatment procedure. Henry D. Dakin was a fine researcher and therapists who developed Dakin solution and applied it to World War I soldiers dying from mustard gas exposure. Not to much need for treatment of mustard gas exposure these days and few doctor's are familiar with the uses of Dakin's solution.

Now I'll tell you something they don't know.

My daughter came home from her grandparents after having spent a weekend visiting. She had a wound on her thigh. It was circular and bruised looking. It was about the size of a quarter. Her mom and I took her to an emergency clinic, Sunday afternoon. The doctor said it might be Lyme's disease and gave her some medicine, telling us to take her to our doctor next week.

Monday, we took her to the emergency room of my hospital where I work. The wound had gotten larger, the size of a silver dollar, and was black in the center. The doctor said it was a Recluse spider bite. It would get worse till it ran it's course and all the tissue would slough off leaving a hole in her leg about the size of a baseball. We would need to consult a surgeon to do plastic surgery later. We bought the medicine he prescribed and did like he told us except I started washing the wound with Dakin's solution. It was noticeably better that evening and we continued washing it three to four times a day for several days. The wound completely healed in five days.

Since that time, I have been bitten by a recluse spider and immediately washed the area off using Dakin's solution with no further attention or problem. I would like to have a doctor verify this treatment; however the opportunity has not presented itself. I might hope that not only will this treatment help spider bite patients, but possibly help patients with MRSA.

"These are the main risk factors for community-acquired (CA) MRSA:

§                  Young age. CA-MRSA can be particularly dangerous in children. Often entering the body through a cut or scrape, MRSA can quickly cause a wide spread infection.

Children may be susceptible because their immune systems aren't fully developed or they don't yet have antibodies to common germs. Children and young adults are also much more likely to develop dangerous forms of pneumonia than older people are.

§                  Participating in contact sports. CA-MRSA has crept into both amateur and professional sports teams. The bacteria spread easily through cuts and abrasions and skin-to-skin contact. §                  Sharing towels or athletic equipment. Although few outbreaks have been reported in public gyms, CA-MRSA has spread among athletes sharing razors, towels, uniforms or equipment. §                  Having a weakened immune system. People with weakened immune systems, including those living with HIV/AIDS, are more likely to have severe CA-MRSA infections. §                  Living in crowded or unsanitary conditions. Outbreaks of CA-MRSA have occurred in military training camps and in American and European prisons.

Association with health care workers. People who are in close contact with health care workers are at increased risk of serious staph infections. "

Quoted from the Mayo Clinic web site.

Note: within a week some of these web addresses have changed meaning you may have to search the subject.

Read about Dakin solution at www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/446.html a supporting article. Read, a seemingly opposing article at www.ncbi.nlm.nhm.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=3348732&dopt=Abstract My unprofessional take on this second article is questioning the term 'in vitro' as not the application I am presenting. I believe that the article has an editorial typo, i.e. the researchers said 'in vitro' and the editor changed it to in vitro, changing the meaning. The difference being that the researchers implied: not for use internally and the article implies: not for use externally.

Also look at the article on how to make Dakin solution at The Ohio State University Medical Center's Department of Impatient Nursing, for information contact email: health-info@osu.edu or call 614.293.3707

 

To get some idea of what Henry D. Dankin was treating in World War I read information at www.enh.org/healthandwellness/bioterrorism/ch018300.aspx?lid=1093

 

The recluse spider bite is serious. Check out the following web site to see what develops. www.brown-recluse.com/bitephotos.html 

 

I have given this idea further thought and believe it can be applied as a product. I would like to outsource the product's manufacture to a country that needs the business and that my conscience supports. There is a quote that I believe originated with the Peace Corp, that I will paraphrase. If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day; but if you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime. A better plan to help people is not always charity. Jobs and income transform the needy into consumers. I would like to outsource innovations to countries I agree with and support. I will investigate outsourcing this product to Israel. This has not worked out and I am now researching China as the best way to get this produce to market. 

 

I have determined to introduce two new products. Advertising on OurChurch's network of web sites and later on, Google. The brand name should be trademarked as "Rec-Loose" and the product claim should be: "Relief for insect bites" packaged as alcohol preps are packaged. The fact that Dakin solution, in packages like alcohol preps, can effectively treat toxic insect bites need not be advertised till clinical studies confirm this claim. The second brand name should be Un-Con pads, used to decontaminate articles from biohazard deposits. This produce will be useful in hospitals, fitness and exercise centers, airport security check points and other public places.

 

I have come to believe that a decontamination prep in larger sizes, 4 by 4s or wash cloth size, could be used by the "Fitness Industry" to decontaminate exercise equipment. The US Military might have a use for the product since the product insures correct measure of the solution, suitability and storability.

 

The military has been using this solution for a long time and has valuable field experience with it's use. The military decon process emphasizes rinsing only personnel not equipment.

 

The following information was found at this web site. 

 

"http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/doctrine/army/mmcch/

Decontam.htm#METHODS%20OF%20DECONTAMINATION"

 

 

 

Oxidation/Hydrolysis

The most important category of chemical decontamination reactions is oxidative chlorination. This term covers the "active chlorine" chemicals like hypochlorite. The pH of a solution is important in determining the amount of active chlorine concentration. An alkaline solution is advantageous. Hypochlorite solutions act universally against the organophosphorus and mustard agents.

Both VX and HD contain sulfur atoms that are readily subject to oxidation. Current doctrine specifies the use of a 0.5% sodium or calcium hypochlorite solution for decontamination of skin and a 5% solution for equipment.

Hydrolysis

Chemical hydrolysis reactions are of two types: acid and alkaline. Acid hydrolysis is of negligible importance for agent decontamination because the hydrolysis rate of most chemical agents is slow, and adequate acid catalysis is rarely observed. Alkaline hydrolysis is initiated by the nucleophilic attack of the hydroxide ion on the phosphorus atoms found in VX and the G agents. The hydrolysis rate is dependent on the chemical structure and reaction conditions such as pH, temperature, the kind of solvent used, and the presence of catalytic reagents. The rate increases sharply at pH values higher than 8 and increases by a factor of four for every 10oC rise in temperature. Several of the hydrolytic chemicals are effective in detoxifying chemical warfare agents; unfortunately, many of these (e.g., NaOH) are unacceptably damaging to the skin. Alkaline pH hypochlorite hydrolyzes VX and the G agents quite well.

WOUND DECONTAMINATION

All casualties entering a medical unit after experiencing a chemical attack are to be considered contaminated unless there is certification of non-contamination.

The initial management of a casualty contaminated by chemical agents will require removal of MOPP and decontamination with 0.5% hypochlorite before treatment within the field treatment facility.

 

 

Homeland Security has found a similar application of this solution to be effective.

 

 

 www.epa.gov/pesticides/factsheets/chemicals/bleachfactsheet.htm

 

I have submitted a project for outsourcing the manufacturing of this produce to OffshoreXperts.com\ for a RFB to last 30 days. The product will be sold as two brands. One brand, a decontamination pad, to clean various items and the other brand, a prep pad, to relieve insect bites. This site had 39 hits but no takers. I am introducing the RFB to China at Alibaba. There has been no action on this effort. I am still trying to find a manufacturer.

Check back with this web page for product developements. 

 

 

Written by Norman Frazier for GTG Inc


 

Observe the Problem

Sometimes Biomedical Technicians need to dig deeper.

A patient temperature measuring device, a thermometer, comes into the Biomed Shop with an equipment failure tag that says: Problem - Inaccurate.

A technician takes the thermometer and inserts it into a probe oven set to 99.9 degrees Fahrenheit and the thermometer reads 99.9 degrees. The technician checks to see if the batteries are lose. Then the technician checks the connector, on the cable of the probe that it is clean and tight, and flexes the probe and cable to see if the reading changes. The thermometer is checked out and is good.

The paper work is completed. End of problem, thermometer is returned to the department for use.

This is the rest of the story.

A nine-year-old girl is admitted to pedi. She has a high fever, 103.6 degrees. She has been throwing up and is dehydrated. She has a rash. The family doctor has seen her twice in the last several days and has taken blood samples. The results show low platelet count and low white cell count.

The little girl is put in bed and the nurse assistant comes in with the thermometer. She puts the probe under the little girl's arm in her armpit. The thermometer reads 98.4 degrees and the nurse writes down 99.4 degrees in the chart. The armpit is used because pedi patients sometimes have attitudes and throw fits when their temperatures are taken. The nurse assistant is taught to add a degree to the temperature taken in the armpit. The doctor will look at the charted temperature and think his little patient isn't as bad as he had feared.

But the little girl's grandmother asks the nurse assistant, "What's her temp?" when she hears 99.4 she walks over and puts her hand on the little girl's forehead and says, That's not right!" "Take her temp orally!" The nurse assistant does and the thermometer reads 103.6 degrees.

The thermometer is tagged "inaccurate" and sent to Biomed.

The Biomed Technician investigates the problem report and realizes there is a problem here but not with the thermometer. What do you do? The Biomed will try to locate the person reporting the problem and explain to everyone available that the temperature in the armpit was 98.4 degrees. The thermometer was right.
Still the oral temperature was 103.6 degrees. The practice of relying on a reading from the armpit is inaccurate.

How can you correct this problem effectively? Communicate!

 

 Written by Norman Frazier CBET for The Biomed Shop

8-1-7


 

 

 

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Favorite Links

  • www.mygtg.org/
  • www.biomedshop.mysite.com/
  • www.ourchurch.com/view/?pageID=292361

 

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Contact Information  

E-mail address

nfrazier@mygtg.org

nfrazier@gsmc.org

frazierfam14@netzero.com

 

Web address

biomedshop.mysite.com

mygtg.org/

Office phone

903.844.2133

 

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Current Projects  

  • BSOS
  • Study to augment I.S. and implement national medical records archives 
  • Biomedical study of topical antiseptic agents
  • Feasibility Study of EMS in Disasters

 

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Biographical Information  

GTG Inc is a Texas corporation, nonprofit, owned and operated by Norman Frazier CBET

RTSC Regency Transaction Service company

GTG Glory to God

CBET Certified Biomedical Engineering Technician

mygtg is GTG Inc's domain name

CJD Creutzfeldt - Jakob disease

MRSA Staphylococcus aureus

RFB the Request For Bid

MOPP no idea, possibly a military acronym for personal gear. 

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Personal Interests  

  • The Google Doc application establishes prior claim to this innovation.
  • The fact that I prefer to outsource manufacture of the product to Israel might slow the product's development and to fast track product development I might need to broaden my RFB. 
  • This presentation was written by Norman Frazier and published by GTG Inc. 

 

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Last revised: 5/2/07, 5/4/07, 5/7/07, 5/8/07, 6/7/07,7/11

 

 

GTG Inc

24670 C.R. 374

Gladewater, Texas 75647

USA

 

 

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RTSC Innovations 

Safety Innovation BSOS

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