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Simple systems which involve many repetitive tasks over time tend to use and re-use index cards of an appropriate size, with more complex systems using expandable "accordion files", file folders, or even entire rooms full of filing cabinets. At the start of a new month, the items for that month are removed from the month folder and placed in the corresponding daily folders. Every day, the current daily folder is emptied and placed at the back of the set. Items which need to be done in a future month are placed in the corresponding monthly folder. Using folders, items scheduled for the current month are placed within the appropriate daily folder. The forty-three divisions come from the sum of two numbers, thirty-one and twelve, corresponding to the maximum thirty-one days in a Gregorian or Julian month and the twelve months in a year. A more common technique is to have index cards with forty-three dividers or a system with forty-three folders or two accordion files. In larger institutional uses, a tickler file would be chronological, with one section for each year or day, sometimes encompassing more than a century in as much detail as appropriate (especially for dates far in the future). The vaccinator can then find the names of all the children with immunizations due on any particular month and direct her or his efforts to finding those particular children. Typically, a child's name and birth date are put on a card, which is then put in the tickler file corresponding to when their next immunization is due. Tickler systems are also used in industrialized and less industrialized countries to improve immunization coverage.
#Tockler program software#
Modern tickler files are often electronic and now fulfilled via software programmed for automatic reminders and tracking. Tickler box in Masundu health center, Kono District, Sierra Leone More recently the concept was re-introduced to popular culture through various self-help books as Pam Young and Peggy Jones' 1977 book Sidetracked Home Executives: From Pig-Pen to Paradise, FlyLady Marla Ciley, Chris Crouch's book Getting Organized, David Allen's 2001 book Getting Things Done, and Merlin Mann's website 43 Folders, whose name comes from one popular method for maintaining a tickler file. In larger firms a single person would be assigned the maintenance and follow-up of this file, distributing tasks and ensuring their follow-up, which could be recorded on the cards for billing and documentation. One common implementation was in law offices in the early twentieth century, if not before, where small task cards or "tickler cards" would be filed by date and then distributed to lawyers as legal tasks such as renewal of trademarks, updating of wills, and filing of motions for a particular case would be approaching.
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