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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A data record for accompanying another record, each of said records
being unassociated with regard to operable use of the other, but
associated by information content, comprising,
a data card having opposed front and back planar surfaces, the card capable
of storing at least one quarter megabyte of machine readable data, said
card being a first data record, and
detachable adhesion means mounted on the back surface of the card for
repeatable attachment and detachment of said card to and from a support
surface associated with a second record, said card being machine readable
when detached from said support surface.
2. The data record of claim 1 wherein said detachment adhesion means is a
first VELCRO strip having an adhesion side and an opposite fastener side
made of synthetic materials which adhere when pressed together, the
adhesive side joined to the back surface of the card.
3. The data record of claim 2 further comprising a second VELCRO strip made
of synthetic materials which adhere when pressed together and which strip
is adhered to the support surface, said second VELCRO strip detachably
adhering to said first VELCRO strip when pressed together.
4. The data record of claim 1 wherein said detachable adhesion means is a
first double sided adhesive strip joined to the back surface of the card.
5. The data record of claim 4 further comprising a second double sided
adhesive strip adhered to the support surface, said second double sided
adhesive strip detachably adhering to said first double sided adhesive
strip when pressed together.
6. The data record of claim 1 wherein said support surface is X-ray film.
7. The data record of claim 1 wherein said support surface is an envelope
for sheet X-ray film.
8. The data record of claim 1 wherein said data card has maximum dimensions
of 65 millimeters by 95 millimeters.
9. A data record for accompanying another record comprising,
a data card having opposed front and back planar surfaces, the card capable
of storing at least one quarter megabyte of machine readable data, said
card being a first data record,
a protective envelope having opposed front and back planar surfaces, the
protective envelope housing said card,
detachable adhesion means mounted on the back surface of the envelope for
repeatable attachment and detachment of the envelope to and from a support
surface, said support surface associated with a second record.
10. The data record of claim 9 wherein said detachable adhesion means is a
first VELCRO strip having an adhesive side and an opposite fastener side
made of synthetic materials which adhere when pressed together, the
adhesive side joined to the back surface of the envelope.
11. The data record of claim 10 further comprising a second VELCRO strip
made of synthetic materials which adhere when pressed together and which
strip is adhered to the support surface, said second VELCRO strip
detachably adhering to said first VELCRO strip when pressed together.
12. The data record of claim 9 wherein said detachable adhesion means is a
first double sided adhesive strip joined to the back surface of the
envelope.
13. The data record of claim 12 further comprising a second double sided
adhesive strip adhered to the support surface, said second double sided
adhesive strip detachably adhering to said first double sided adhesive
strip when pressed together.
14. The data record of claim 9 wherein said support surface is X-ray film.
15. The data record of claim 9 wherein said support surface is an envelope
for sheet X-ray film.
16. The data record of claim 9 wherein said protective envelope is
transparent.
17. The data record of claim 9 wherein said protective envelope is opaque.
18. The data record of claim 9 wherein said protective envelope and said
support surface both carry bar code indicia means for relating one to the
other.
19. The data record of claim 9 wherein a plurality of detachable envelopes,
each containing a data card, are mounted on a single support surface.
20. The data record of claim 9 wherein said support surface is a book
cover.
21. A data record for accompanying another record comprising,
a substrate having opposed front and back planar surfaces,
memory means fixed to said substrate for storing at least one quarter
megabyte of machine readable data, said substrate and memory means forming
a data card having a first data record, and
detachable adhesion means mounted on the back surface of said substrate for
repeatable attachment and detachment of said data card to and from a
support surface associated with a second data record, each of said first
and second data records being operatively unassociated with respect to the
other, with said data card being machine readable when detached from said
support surface.
22. The data record of claim 21 wherein data card is an optical data card.
23. The data record of claim 21 wherein said data card is a semiconductor
memory card.
24. The data record of claim 21 wherein said data card is a magnetic memory
card. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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DESCRIPTION
1. Technical Field
The invention relates to high density information storage, and in
particular to a machine readable data record for use with another record
medium.
2. Background Art
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,236,332, Domo discloses a wallet-size medical record
card to be carried by the individual containing a microfilm portion having
some data visible to the eye and other data visible by magnification. The
directly visible data is code characters pertaining to emergency medical
conditions of the patient and magnifiable data protions detail the medical
history.
In medical records archival data storage, it is frequently necessary to
store pictures such as digital X-ray pictures, CAT-scan pictures, digital
microscope photographs, NMR and ultrasonic scan pictures, and other
diagnostic images. These pictures originate as digital data. If digital
data is not recorded in anticipation of future image processing, it would
be lost forever. Frequently the data is converted to an enhanced eye
readable picture representing only one form of the data.
In prior application Ser. No. 692,788, J. Drexler teaches a method for
recording medical data in which both an eye readable medical picture and a
digital representation of the same picture are recorded and stored
together in side-by-side relationship. A photographic medium is exposed
and developed to create an eye-readable medical picture, and a high data
capacity optical data storage lamella is disposed on the medium next to
the picture. Alternatively, the lamella may first be disposed on the
photographic medium, then the medium exposed and developed. In either
case, a digital representation of the medical picture is then laser
recorded onto the lamella by creating spots of contrasting reflectivity.
Each data spot (which represents a binary 0 to 1) is very small in
diameter (approximately 5 microns) and tightly spaced between adjacent
spots (a distance of 5-20 microns). Because smaller spots and tighter
spacing results in more binary numbers being recorded, considerable
storage capacity is achieved. A significant amount of additional medical
information related to the picture, such as an analysis or diagnosis, can
also be recorded on the lamella with the digital representation of the
medical picture. An advantage of that invention is that the digital
representation of the medical picture can be transmitted over
communication links, enhanced by computers or stored in a manner more
permanent than film.
In connection with medical X-rays, there are often two needs. One need is
to have a digitized version of a picture or scan. Another need is to have
annotations, such as a radiologist's report, accompanying the pictures.
Hospitals and insurance companies are presently faced with burgeoning
amounts of diagnostic data, both pictorial and written. Yet, the means for
organizing, recording and storing data remains rudimentary.
An object of the invention was to devise a data record for accompanying an
existing record as an auxiliary data record, to facilitate organizing,
transmitting and storing such existing records.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
The above object has been met with an auxiliary data record which is a data
card capable of storing at least one quarter of a megabyte of machine
readable data, preferably more, for either annotating another data record,
or duplicating it in digital form. By this means, information in the
primary record may be easily electonically transmitted, copied, or stored
in miniature form. The auxiliary data record is a data card of a type
having opposed sides, with the back side having a detachable adhesion
region for attachment to and detachment from a primary data record.
Alternatively, the card may be housed in an envelope having a similar
adhesion region. The auxiliary record or envelope may be used directly
with primary information records and carriers such as medical X-rays or
envelopes holding medical X-rays, books, or the like.
By uniting the auxiliary data record with the primary data record, machine
readable data which is linked to the primary record may be copied,
electronically transmitted or stored in a very compact format.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a front view of an auxiliary data record of the present invention
in a protective envelope.
FIG. 2 is a side sectional view of the data record of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a front view of a primary record carrier with the auxiliary data
record of FIG. 1 adhered thereto.
FIG. 4 is a front view of a data record of the present invention adhered to
a film sheet.
FIG. 5 is a data record of the present invention adhered to a support
surface.
FIG. 6 is a perspective view of a data record of the present invention
showing a means for adhering the data record to a primary record.
FIG. 7 is a perspective view of a book cover showing a plurality of data
records of the present invention in protective envelopes adhered to an
inside surface of one of the covers.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
With reference to FIG. 1, a data card 11 is shown in transparent protective
envelope 13. The card may be an optical or magnetic data card or a
semiconductor memory card.
An illustrative magnetic card is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,838,252 to Hynes
et al. An illustrative semiconductor memory card is shown in U.S. Pat. No.
3,971,916 to R. Moreno. Although the exemplary described by Moreno has
only sixteen kilobytes of memory, subsequently developed memory cards have
a memory capability exceeding one quarter megabyte. An illustrative
optical data card is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,544,835 to J. Drexler. Other
magnetic, semiconductor or optical data cards may also be employed.
Moreover, the card may employ two technologies. For example, a
semiconductor memory card may have a stripe of optical and/or magnetic
recording material thereon. This combination of media allows the same or
different information to be recorded in two forms. This facilitates
reading of the information in those situations where an office might have
one type of reader, but not another. Presently, since there are no
universal standards for readers, or for card formats, a single card may
have to combine two technologies or a single envelope might have to hold a
plurality of cards for different types of readers.
Stripe 15 on card 11 is a strip of magnetic or optical recording material.
If card 11 is a semiconductor memory card, commonly known as a chip card,
the semiconductor elements are buried within the card and are not visible
at the surface. The front surface of the card may have additional data,
such as a photograph, or information related to a particular user which is
eye-readable.
The strip of recording material, or the semiconductor memory elements, may
be read-only material or elements. Alternatively, the strip may be a
direct-read-after-write or erasable medium. For most applications, it is
preferable to have an updatable medium so that any information which is
added to a primary information record, such as an additional medical
X-ray, may be annotated by use of the auxiliary data record of the present
invention.
A typical size for the card, but not a critical size, is approximately 54
millimeters in width and approximately 85 millimeters in length. The
preferred maximum width is less than 65 millimeters and the preferred
maximum length is less than 95 millimeters. Any strip of recording
material on the card has a typical width of about 15 millimeters and a
thickness of about 100-500 microns, thereby leaving room for other
indicia. Recording material is applied to the front surface of the card.
The front and back surfaces of the card should be substantially planar and
parallel. A thin transparent laminating material may be applied over the
front surface of the card. The card base is typically a dielectric, such
as polyvinyl chloride or polycarbonate.
With reference to FIG. 2, the envelope 13 carrying the auxiliary card 11 is
adhered to a primary data record 17 by means of an adhesion member 19. The
adhesion member may be a VELCRO strip having fasteners 21 on one side and
an adhesive, such as hot-melt material, joining the opposite surface 23 to
the rear surface of envelope 13. VELCRO is a registered trademark for
synthetic materials which adhere when pressed together and which are
detachable when pulled apart. Fasteners 21 are linked to a similar VELCRO
strip 25 which is joined to the primary data record by hot-melt material.
The two VELCRO strips allow joining of card envelope 13 to the primary
record 17.
With reference to FIG. 3, an envelope 13 holding an auxiliary data card 11
is seen to be adhered to a large envelope 27 of the type which may hold
sheets of film, such as X-ray 29. Card envelope 13 may be adhered to
primary data envelope 27 by either of the methods described above, namely
VELCRO strips or hot-melt material. In organizing large numbers of primary
data records and accompanying envelopes, it may be useful to link, with
similar identification, the auxiliary data cards and their small envelopes
with the larger envelopes of the primary record. One means of
accomplishing this is by bar code indicia 31 applied to primary record
envelope 27 and similar indicia 33 applied to data card envelope 13. If
the data card envelope 13 becomes separated or lost relative to the
primary record envelope 27, bar code would be of assistance in rapidly
identifying the proper location of the record. Eye-readable indicia could
also be used.
With reference to FIG. 4, a film sheet 35 is shown having an auxiliary data
card 37 mounted directly thereto. This figure illustrates that a data card
may be removably joined by means of an adhesion member 39 directly to the
sheet. U.S. Pat. No. Re 32,249 to Esmay shows a double-coated
pressure-sensitive adhesive tape. Adhesives for tape are known which can
be peeled away without leaving any adhesive residue. For example, see U.S.
Pat. No. 4,599,265 to Esmay.
FIG. 5 shows a similar situation wherein card 37 and adhesion member 39 are
adhered directly to support surface 41 which may merely be a convenient
holder for card 37, such as a temporary storage facility. The purpose of
FIG. 5 is to illustrate that the data card, with or without its protective
envelope, may be joined to any support surface and serve a useful purpose,
such as awaiting the arrival of a primary data record.
FIG. 6 shows a detail for an alternative joinder structure for a card. In
this situation, a first adhesive strip 43 is applied to the backside of
card 37. A similar strip 45 is applied to film sheet 35. Strips 43 and 45
retain sufficient tack to facilitate repeated joinder of the card to the
film sheet even if strip 43 does not land directly on top of strip 45, or
lands partially on top of it. In handling data records, frequently there
is little attention given to handling of the records and it is desirable
to have card 37 rapidly joined to sheet 35 even if it is joined relatively
high or low compared to the desired position.
With respect to FIG. 7, book covers 51 and 53 are shown in an open
position, with book pages removed. A plurality of auxiliary data card
envelopes 55, 57, and so on, are shown joined to cover 51 for detachably
adhering the card to the cover. The envelopes have open ends so that cards
may be readily removed. Normally, an envelope is removed first from cover
51 and then a card, such as card 59 is then removed from the envelope. The
material of the envelopes is selected to have sufficient friction against
the card to retain it in place. Alternatively, a flap can be provided on
the envelopes to assist in preserving cards in place, although this may
add undesired thickness to the envelopes. The cover 51 serves as a carrier
for a plurality of cards such that a number of cards may be stored in a
central facility as copies of primary data records, such as medical
X-rays. The covers serve to provide a location for eye-readable
information, such as indexing of the cards as well as providing an
environmental housing, functioning as a secondary protective enclosure,
the card envelope being the primary protective enclosure. The present
invention allows a card to be removed, together with its primary
protective enclosure, if one is provided, so that information stored on
the card may be copied, electronically transmitted or read, without
disturbing other cards.
Alternatively, the support surface for the auxiliary data record may be a
piece of equipment, such as a piece of electronic or communications
equipment, or may be the interior of an automotive glove compartment. In
either case, the auxiliary data record is stored in a position where it
may be used with another piece of equipment.
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Description  |
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