A proposed standard for monitoring equipment: What equipment should be included? Frank E. Block Jr Editorial Pages: 1 - 4
Anesthetic mishaps and the cost of monitoring: A proposed standard for monitoring equipment Charles WhitcherAllen K. ReamLawrence Siegel Opinion Pages: 5 - 15
The prevalence of hypoxemia detected by pulse oximetry during recovery from anesthesia Richard W. MorrisAlan BuschmanDaniel B. Raemer Original Articles Pages: 16 - 20
A quantitative evaluation of the Hewlett-Packard 78354A noninvasive blood pressure meter Patrick WhalenAllen K. Ream Original Articles Pages: 21 - 30
A clinical evaluation of the accuracy of the Nellcor N-100 and Ohmeda 3700 pulse oximeters William T. CecilKevin J. ThorpeGerald F. Tuohy Original Articles Pages: 31 - 36
Automated charting of physiological variables in anesthesia: A quantitative comparison of automated versus handwritten anesthesia records Jos G. C. LerouRis DirksenJan F. Crul Original Articles Pages: 37 - 47
Evaluation of a microcomputer-based clinical laboratory data acquisition system linked with a minicomputer-based patient data management system Koji MoritaKazuyuki Ikeda Original Articles Pages: 48 - 58
Evaluation of the Datascope ACCUSAT pulse oximeter in healthy adults Yitzhak MendelsonJoel C. KentRobert M. Giasi Technical Note Pages: 59 - 63
Computer-assisted Doppler monitoring to enhance detection of air emboli Gordon L. GibbyGhaleb A. Ghani Algorithms Pages: 64 - 73