Continuing Education Director’s Files
- CA OSLER P131-K
- Series
- 1998 to 2003, 2009 to 2012
files 1060-1069, 1495
Laurie Scott 1998-2003 1060-1069
Lindsay Glynn 2009-2012 1495
3 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Continuing Education Director’s Files
files 1060-1069, 1495
Laurie Scott 1998-2003 1060-1069
Lindsay Glynn 2009-2012 1495
Talks, Lectures, Conferences, TV and Radio Broadcastings/programs
Part of Arthur Vineberg Fonds
Sub-series consists of talks, lectures, conferences given by Vineberg. Clinical talks, contains correpondence, lectures, telegram, drafst, graphs, photograph, newspaper clipping, programs,
Files in chronological order of event.
Part of Arthur Vineberg Fonds
Series consists of files showing the different works in research done by Vineberg, with his research fellows, correspondence.
Part of Harold Nathan Segall Fonds
This series consists of patient records started and/or consulted between 1939 and 1969, but not consulted after 1969. Each file is stored in a 4x6" envelope. Most of the files contain heart sounds diagrams drawn by Dr. Segall, 6x12'' clinical history forms, sections of electrocardiograms attached to dated cards, as well as 4x6" normal heart sounds record forms completed by Dr. Segall, which are often accompanied by sections of electrocardiogram readings. Many files also contain correspondence between Dr. Segall and other doctors, medical institutions, and health insurance companies, and occasionally correspondence between Dr. Segall and the patient and/or the patient's family.
Case histories, mitral stenosis
Part of Harold Nathan Segall Fonds
This series consists of case history files of patients with mitral stenosis. Like most other patient files of the fonds, almost all of these files contain heart sounds diagrams drawn by Dr. Segall, 6x12" clinical history forms, sections of electrocardiograms attached to dated cards, as well as 4x6" normal heart sounds record forms completed by Dr. Segall which are often accompanied by sections of electrocardiogram readings. Many files also contain correspondence between Dr. Segall and other doctors, medical institutions, and health insurance companies, and occasionally correspondence between Dr. Segall and the patient and/or the patient's family.
Part of Harold Nathan Segall Fonds
This series consists of rolled electrocardiograms taken of various patients.
Case histories of Trans Canada Airlines and Ferry Command pilots
Part of Harold Nathan Segall Fonds
Series contains case histories of Trans Canada Airlines and Ferry Command pilots. As Dr. Segall explains in "The evolution of the record system" (Box 308), the TCA and ferry command patient records were segregated in order to provide a collection of normal patterns of heart sounds from which he could develop a model pattern for heart sounds. This normal model pattern was then used as the standard against which he could compare the heart sounds of other patients.
Part of Harold Nathan Segall Fonds
This Series consists of ten drawers of a Kardex index, each of which is approximately 52 cm long. The top five drawers consist of indexed conditions, each of which is identified by a two or three character alphanumeric code (either A1 to A45, B1 to B99, or C1 to C70). Attached to each condition in the index is a list of the electrocardiogram numbers of particular patients. Dr. Segall seems to have determined that the listed electrocardiograms represent manifestations of their corresponding Kardex index condition. The individual electrocardiograms are located in Series G and are marked with their electrocardiogram numbers, the date on which they were created, as well as the names of the patients from which they were taken.
Drawers 6 through 10 of the Kardex index (Series M) contain indexed sections for 80 different cardiac symptoms. Each of the 80 symptoms are further divided into 10 (numbered 0 to 9) different sub-sections (possibly for different variations of each symptom), each of which contains a list of the electrocardiogram numbers, often, but not always, including the numbers for electrocardiograms of the patients whose files bear that particular two to three digit numerical code. The listed electrocardiograms seem to have been determined by Dr. Segall to represent manifestations of the corresponding Kardex index symptom.