1904-5.] THE MEpDICcAL INSPECTION OF SCHOOL CHILDREN. 207 
Cases of mumps that have been excluded may be re-admitted by 
Inspector in charge of the school. 
The second day following, the medical inspector will return to those 
classes in which he had ordered children under treatment 48 hours pre- 
viously. He shall call for the children ordered under treatment in that 
class, and check them on index card as under treatment or exclude them 
as the occasion may require. When all of these cases have been attended 
to, proceed with regular routine work of other classes in the school. 
A daily report for each school assigned to the inspector must be 
forwarded each school day by the inspector in charge to the Central Office, 
so as that it shall be received at Central Office not later than 9 a.m. the 
day following. 
In his report must be stated the number examined in morning and 
routine inspection and the total ; also the number excluded, giving the 
name, age, address and reason for exclusion. The report must be pro- 
perly backed and signed. 
These daily reports must be made in duplicate as regards the name, 
age, residence, date, and reason for exclusion of all excluded children. 
One is to be placed on file at the school so that it may be referred to by 
the school nurse or principal or other authorized person, and the other, 
properly filled out, to be forwarded to the Central Office. 
Class index cards must be left at the respective schools and kept on 
file, that they may be referred to by any authorized person. 
Afternoon classes are to be inspected as per instructions above- 
‘‘Morning inspections’’ refer to the call to see if any suspicious cases 
have been isolated by the teacher. 
e 
Class index cards for afternoon classes are to be marked p.m. class. 
Each inspector shall be held responsible for the proper condition of health 
in his schools and must require that each case indexed for disease shall 
continue under treatment until the condition requiring treatment is cured. 
Under no circumstance will an inspector treat any disease. He 
should refer cases of trachoma to the Gouverneur Hospital, and pedicu- 
losis, acute conjunctivitis, scabies, ringworm, impetigo, favus, molluscum 
contagiosum, are referred to the school nurse assigned to the school. 
All cases sent to the nurse must have a card on which is written 
the code number of disease for which the child is sent to the nurse. 
When, in the opinion of the school nurse, the child is cured, the 
