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Now Read This: The SI Units Are Here
George D. Lundberg, MD;
Cheryl Iverson;
Gabriela Radulescu
Arch Neurol. 1986;43(6):547-557.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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As of July 1, 1986, in all articles appearing in JAMA and the nine AMA specialty journals, clinical laboratory data will be expressed in conventional units followed in parentheses by Systéme International (SI) units. This is the first phase of our two-year conversion to SI—the measurement system currently in use by most of the world, as discussed previously in this and other AMA journals.1-4 This gradual transition was designed to allow time for learning and is in keeping with the recommendation of the AMA Council on Scientific Affairs, which was adopted by the House of Delegates as policy in December 1984: "4. Develop and implement an educational effort for all physicians to assist them in making an error-free clinical conversion to SI units."2
Promoted by the American National Metric Council (ANMC) and supported by many organizations, the conversion to SI units was mandated by the House of Delegates
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
Chicago
Footnotes
This editorial is reprinted from JAMA (1986;255:2329-2339).
Reprint requests to the Editor, Archives of Neurology, Room 5-4327, 601 Elmwood Ave, Rochester, NY 14642.
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