Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
The observations which form the basis of this paper were made on newly-born children with the object of determining whether their temperature differed from that of the adult, and if so, how and to what extent. They were made during a recent residence in the Edinburgh Maternity Hospital, with the full sanction of the attending physician, Dr Charles Bell. The thermometers used were Casella's straight self-registering. The rectum was the part chosen for the insertion of the instrument. The utmost expedition was used in ligaturing the cord, and separating the child from its mother. This being effected, the bulb of the thermometer was at once introduced into the rectum, and the child was wrapped in flannel, and committed to the charge of a nurse, who held the instrument steadily in situ. In five minutes it was removed, and the temperature noted. The observations were repeated every fifteen minutes during the first hour, every thirty minutes during the second and third hours, and then every hour up till the sixth hour after birth; after that at wider intervals up to twenty-four hours; and then only twice a day between ten and eleven in the morning, and between six and seven in the evening.
page 435 note * The instruments were verified by the maker by a standard which is in perfect accordance with that of the Royal Kew Observatory.