AMA-TEI-LITE Mark-Up Elements

[Mirrored from: http://www.pitt.edu/~trent1/tagteam4.html]


Contents:

  1. DE.ECONCOND
  2. DE.ENVCOND
  3. DE.HOUSCOND
  4. DE.POSTPONE
  5. OB.ANIMAL
  6. OB.APPARATUS
  7. OB.DISEASE
  8. OB.MEDICINE
  9. OB.POSTPONE
  10. PE.MEDICAL
  11. PE.PATIENT
  12. PE.PERSON
  13. PE.POSTPONE
  14. PL.COMMERCIAL
  15. PL.GEOGRAPHIC
  16. PL.MEDICAL
  17. PL.POSTPONE
  18. PL.SOCIAL
  19. PR.DIAGNOSIS
  20. PR.NUTRITION
  21. PR.POSTPONE
  22. PR.SANITATION
  23. PR.TREATMENT
  24. POSTPONE

DE.ECONCOND
surrounds descriptions of economic conditions.

Example:
<de.econcond>By railroad, it communicates with the chief seaboard towns in New England, and, with a rich and extensive agricultural interior, abounding in mineral and manufacturing resources</de.econcond>


DE.ENVCOND
surrounds descriptions of environmental conditions.

Example:
<de.envcond>deficient drainage, street cleaning, supply of water, and ventilation</de.envcond>


DE.HOUSCOND
surrounds descriptions of housing conditions.

Example:
<de.houscond>improperly constructed houses, and the various kinds of nuisances incident to populous places</de.houscond>


DE.POSTPONE
surrounds descriptions of things which do not fit into any of the other descriptive elements.

OB.ANIMAL
surrounds animals.

Example:
<ob.animal>pig</ob.animal>


OB.APPARATUS
surrounds apparatuses.

Example:
<ob.apparatus>Ledoyen's disinfecting fluid</ob.apparatus>


OB.DISEASE
surrounds diseases.

Example:
<ob.disease>Their immediate action is to induce febrile and asthenic affections; hence consumption, scrofula, and rheumatic and gastric affections, are their constant attendants</ob.disease>


OB.MEDICINE
surrounds medicines and drugs.

Example:
<ob.medicine>There are three dispensaries affording medical aid and medicine gratuitously to 50,000 patient annual</ob.medicine>


OB.POSTPONE
surrounds objects which do not fit into any of the other object elements.

PE.MEDICAL
surrounds a medical person(s).

Example:
<pe.medical>Professor Gardner, of Hampden-Sydney College</pe.medical>


PE.PATIENT
surrounds a patient(s).

Example:
<pe.patient>the insane</pe.patient>


PE.PERSON
surrounds a non-medical, non-patient person(s).

Example:
<pe.person>labouring classes</pe.person>


PE.POSTPONE
surrounds a person or group of people that do not fit into any of the other person elements.

PL.COMMERCIAL
surrounds a commercial place.

Example:
<pl.commercial>the old Brewery, at the Five Points</pl.commercial>


PL.GEOGRAPHIC
surrounds a geographic place.

Example:
<pl.geographic>Philadelphia</pl.geographic>


PL.MEDICAL
surrounds a medical place.

Example:
<pl.medical>Bellevue Hospital</pl.medical>


PL.POSTPONE
surrounds a place which does not fit into any of the other place elements.

PL.SOCIAL
surrounds a social place.

Example:
<pl.social>the space between Front street and the river should be kept open, and that the bank should be laid out as a shaded promenade, along the whole line of the city, to be used as he expresses it, "as a common exchange or walk," with wharves opening on the river below, thus forming a beautiful quay for the securing of vessels, the unlading of merchandize, &c., but that no buildings should be erected on the east side of Front street.</pl.social>


PR.DIAGNOSIS
surrounds a process involving diagnosing.

Example:
<pr.diagnosis>"What is the influence of the substitution of the luxuries, tea and coffee, as a food, upon the health of the labouring classses?" Injurious. They act as slow poisons. The effect is more perceptible, and more easily traced to the cause, than in the fashionable devotee, for its consequences are not modified by other deleterious agents and practices.</pr.diagnosis>


PR.NUTRITION
surrounds a process involving nutrition.

Example:
<pr.nutrition>An abundant supply of good water is obtained from wells and springs in the town, and its immediate vicinity.</pr.nutrition>


PR.POSTPONE
surrounds a process which does not fit into any of the other process elements.

PR.SANITATION
surrounds a process involving sanitation.

Example:
<pr.sanitation>In order to prevent this decomposition, the streets should be swept daily, including the narrow alleys and courts, which, indeed, demand greater attention than the more open thoroughfares; in addition to which, every facility should be offered to the inhabitants to get rid of the collections of the kitchen.</pr.sanitation>


PR.TREATMENT
surrounds a process involving treatment.

Example:
<pr.treatment>The inmates suffer from all prevailing diseases equally with the people in town, but all affections are more under the control of the physician, and treated with better success, on account of the habits of the patient, and his perfect submission.</pr.treatment>


POSTPONE
surrounds something which does not fit into any of the other classes, and for which a new class and element might be made.

By Trent E. Curtis
Catalog Librarian
Falk Library of the Health Sciences
trent1+@pitt.edu

Last updated: March 27, 1995.