London's Pulse: Medical Officer of Health reports 1848-1972

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Hendon 1937

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Hendon]

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137
dance Officers, Parents, or otherwise. It is immaterial for the purpose
of this heading whether the children are inspected at the School or at
the Clinic or elsewhere. If a child happens to come before the School
Medical Officer for special inspection during a year in which it falls
into one of the routine groups, its routine inspection should be entered
in Part A of Table I and its special inspection in Part B. The inspection
to be recorded under the heading of special inspections should be
only the first inspection of the child so referred for a particular defect.
If a child who has been specially inspected for one defect is subsequently
specially inspected for another defect, such subsequent inspection
should be recorded as a Special Inspection and not as a Re-inspection.
(e) Under this heading should be entered the medical inspections of
children who as the result of a routine or special inspection come up
later on for subsequent re-inspection, whether at the School or at the
Clinic. The first inspection in every case will be entered as a routine
or special inspection as the case may be. Every subsequent inspection
of the same defect will be entered as a re-inspection.
Care should be taken to see that nothing is included under the
head of special inspections or re-inspections except such inspections as
are defined above. Attendances for treatment by a Nurse, or for
examinations by anyone other than a Doctor on the staff of the School
Medical Service, should not be recorded as medical inspections. If,
however, at any such attendance a child is also examined by one of the
Authority's Medical Officers, this should be recorded as a special
inspection or re-inspection as the case may be, even if treatment is
also given; but such attendance may also of course be recorded as an
attendance for treatment.