SUMMARY: A study of the relative values of a number of bacteriological tests for assessing the condition of milk bottles indicated that the colony count of the bottle rinse solution on yeastrel milk agar incubated for 4 days at 30°, combined with a clot‐on‐boiling test applied to 1 ml. of rinse in 9 ml. of sterile milk after incubation for 72 hr. at 19–20°, gave the most useful results. The mean of the ratios of colony counts at 30° to those at 37° was 15·1, while it was as high as 22·9 for rinses with 37° of over 600 for an unsatisfactory bottle should be retained when the test is done at 30°. The thermoduric colony count of rinses of milk bottles, even when laboratory pasteurized in milk, did not provide any additional information to that given by the colony count at 30° made without pasteurization. A high proportion of the organisms in bottle rinses survived laboratory pasteurization in milk, the survival rate being highest in efficiently treated bottles. The clot‐on‐boiling test gave results in general agreement with colony counts and served to indicate the potential influence of badly contaminated bottles on the keeping quality of milk placed in them. A substantial proportion of rinses with satisfactory colony counts reduced methylene blue within 48 hr. at 19–20°. Colony counts at 37° were on the average much lower for bottles treated with steam than for bottles submitted to detergent treatment in various types of bottle washing machines. Treatment of bottles by steam or hypochlorite was more efficiently done on the farms than at the dairies.
The skin is the largest organ in the body, and provides a protective barrier between the environment and ourselves (Cameron, 1997). It also mirrors the health status of the person, giving greater insight into the client's physical, social and psychological status. Therefore, those who give skin care and help with personal hygiene are in the perfect position to assess the skin status (Lawley, 1991). This article will provide information and advice on how to care for the skin of elderly patients.
The range of support surfaces available is quite varied. It is important that both the purchaser and the users are satisfied with the quality, comfort and the pressure-reducing properties of the mattress. The mattress needs to be versatile, in that it can be used both in a patient's home or in a hospital or nursing home and also on profiling beds. The Kaymed range of mattresses offers increased comfort with low interface pressures for patients up to and including high risk. This product focus examines the Kaymed mattress and looks at the design and results of tests performed on the visco-elastic foam used in the manufacturing of the mattresses.
Skin wounds result from a wide variety of physical insults, traumas and idiopathic causes. All are prone to infection and vulnerable to dehydration, contamination and further damage from environmental insult. Appropriate therapy depends upon correct diagnosis of the lesion, wound bed preparation with antimicrobial measures as required, and selection and application of suitable dressings. Whereas tissue viability clinicians and nurses will routinely assess levels of tissue damage and infection through observation of the colour, depth and size of wounds, backed up by microbiological assessment, a range of laboratory pathological services are available to give a wider picture of clinical wounds and possible causes of indolence and non-healing. This review identifies the contribution that specialist pathologists can make to identifying immunological changes in patients and toxic events resulting from the use of xenobiotic materials in wound management, and unravelling the mechanistic action of wound care products. Emphasis is placed on the central role of research in furthering the study of wound healing and mechanisms of chronicity.
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