def get_paragraphs_for_summaries(): paras =[] paras.append("""Stephen is a 53 year old gentleman who does general duties police work. He is married and has an 18 year old daughter at home. He is right hand dominant. Cigarettes nil, alcohol rare, allergies nil. DVTe nil. Past medical history hyperlipidemia and reflux testicular cancer in 2000 and right knee reconstruction in 1987. Medications include Nexium and Crestor.""") paras.append("""History presenting complaint: Right knee and right elbow injuries. On 12 January 2020, while at work he was trying to apprehend a stolen vehicle. The deployed some road spikes onto the road. The stolen vehicle went over the road spikes. He was attempting to retrieve the spikes to prevent damage to civilian and police vehicles and while he was doing that, he was hit by a police vehicle coming from behind. The police vehicle was approximately doing 50 km/hr. The headlight of the police car stuck him on the lateral aspect of the right knee. He jumped in the air and flicked in the air with his right elbow also hitting the police car before he flung over a barrier. He was able to mobilise afterwards when the adrenaline was taking effect. After he cooled down that night he developed significant pain in both the elbow and the knee. The elbow seemed to have settled with time but he has got slight discomfort on the lateral epicondyle of the right elbow but otherwise no instability, clicking, locking or catching of the elbow.""") paras.append("""His knee has medial sided pain. It is an annoying type of pain that is present at rear and with activity. It feels like it is getting slightly better but his main problem is that he cannot still fully flex his knee as he used to do before the accident. He has noticed some clicking ad a little bit of swelling in the knee. He has had no instability but he is still a little bit stiff when he first gets up. He has been treated with 4 sessions of physiotherapy. He has had two operations on this knee before when it was reconstructed which was an open procedure and an anthroscopy later to shave off the cartilage. He never got back to playing rugby after his reconstruction but he was able to do martial arts and all his policing duties without any problem.""") paras.append("""He is mildly overweight, normal gait and no effusion in the knee and a range of motion of 0 to 110 degrees which cannot be improved passively. His right elbow has full range of motion and is stable. He has had an Xray on right elbow showing no fracture and an xray of knee showed early medial compartment osteoarthritis. He has got new clicking in his knee and has been advised to get an MRI scan.""") paras.append("""As far as his right elbow is concerned, he should reduce weight lifting activity and any repetitive right upper limb activity that causes any discomfort. His right knee requires an MRI scan to look for any loose bodies and I will see him with the results of the scan. In the meantime, he can continue with his general policing duties which he has anyways been doing since the accident""") return paras def get_paragraphs_for_entities(): paras =[] paras.append("""18 February2020 Dr Christine Fowler""") paras.append("""Dear Christine, Re: Stephen Parrot""") paras.append("""Stephen is a 53 year old gentleman who does general duties police work. He is married and has an 18 year old daughter at home. He is right hand dominant. Cigarettes nil, alcohol rare, allergies nil. DVTe nil. Past medical history hyperlipidemia and reflux testicular cancer in 2000 and right knee reconstruction in 1987. Medications include Nexium and Crestor.""") paras.append("""History presenting complaint: Right knee and right elbow injuries. On 12 January 2020, while at work he was trying to apprehend a stolen vehicle. The deployed some road spikes onto the road. The stolen vehicle went over the road spikes. He was attempting to retrieve the spikes to prevent damage to civilian and police vehicles and while he was doing that, he was hit by a police vehicle coming from behind. The police vehicle was approximately doing 50 km/hr. The headlight of the police car stuck him on the lateral aspect of the right knee. He jumped in the air and flicked in the air with his right elbow also hitting the police car before he flung over a barrier. He was able to mobilise afterwards when the adrenaline was taking effect. After he cooled down that night he developed significant pain in both the elbow and the knee. The elbow seemed to have settled with time but he has got slight discomfort on the lateral epicondyle of the right elbow but otherwise no instability, clicking, locking or catching of the elbow.""") paras.append("""His knee has medial sided pain. It is an annoying type of pain that is present at rear and with activity. It feels like it is getting slightly better but his main problem is that he cannot still fully flex his knee as he used to do before the accident. He has noticed some clicking ad a little bit of swelling in the knee. He has had no instability but he is still a little bit stiff when he first gets up. He has been treated with 4 sessions of physiotherapy. He has had two operations on this knee before when it was reconstructed which was an open procedure and an anthroscopy later to shave off the cartilage. He never got back to playing rugby after his reconstruction but he was able to do martial arts and all his policing duties without any problem.""") paras.append("""He is mildly overweight, normal gait and no effusion in the knee and a range of motion of 0 to 110 degrees which cannot be improved passively. His right elbow has full range of motion and is stable. He has had an Xray on right elbow showing no fracture and an xray of knee showed early medial compartment osteoarthritis. He has got new clicking in his knee and has been advised to get an MRI scan.""") paras.append("""As far as his right elbow is concerned, he should reduce weight lifting activity and any repetitive right upper limb activity that causes any discomfort. His right knee requires an MRI scan to look for any loose bodies and I will see him with the results of the scan. In the meantime, he can continue with his general policing duties which he has anyways been doing since the accident""") paras.append("""Kind regards, Dr Jason Sanders""") return paras def get_text_from_ocr_engine(): return """18 February2020 Dr Christine Fowler Dear Christine, Re: Stephen Parrot Stephen is a 53 year old gentleman who does general duties police work. He is married and has an 18 year old daughter at home. He is right hand dominant. Cigarettes nil, alcohol rare, allergies nil. DVTe nil. Past medical history hyperlipidemia and reflux testicular cancer in 2000 and right knee reconstruction in 1987. Medications include Nexium and Crestor. History presenting complaint: Right knee and right elbow injuries. On 12 January 2020, while at work he was trying to apprehend a stolen vehicle. The deployed some road spikes onto the road. The stolen vehicle went over the road spikes. He was attempting to retrieve the spikes to prevent damage to civilian and police vehicles and while he was doing that, he was hit by a police vehicle coming from behind. The police vehicle was approximately doing 50 km/hr. The headlight of the police car stuck him on the lateral aspect of the right knee. He jumped in the air and flicked in the air with his right elbow also hitting the police car before he flung over a barrier. He was able to mobilise afterwards when the adrenaline was taking effect. After he cooled down that night he developed significant pain in both the elbow and the knee. The elbow seemed to have settled with time but he has got slight discomfort on the lateral epicondyle of the right elbow but otherwise no instability, clicking, locking or catching of the elbow. His knee has medial sided pain. It is an annoying type of pain that is present at rear and with activity. It feels like it is getting slightly better but his main problem is that he cannot still fully flex his knee as he used to do before the accident. He has noticed some clicking ad a little bit of swelling in the knee. He has had no instability but he is still a little bit stiff when he first gets up. He has been treated with 4 sessions of physiotherapy. He has had two operations on this knee before when it was reconstructed which was an open procedure and an anthroscopy later to shave off the cartilage. He never got back to playing rugby after his reconstruction but he was able to do martial arts and all his policing duties without any problem. He is mildly overweight, normal gait and no effusion in the knee and a range of motion of 0 to 110 degrees which cannot be improved passively. His right elbow has full range of motion and is stable. He has had an Xray on right elbow showing no fracture and an xray of knee showed early medial compartment osteoarthritis. He has got new clicking in his knee and has been advised to get an MRI scan. As far as his right elbow is concerned, he should reduce weight lifting activity and any repetitive right upper limb activity that causes any discomfort. His right knee requires an MRI scan to look for any loose bodies and I will see him with the results of the scan. In the meantime, he can continue with his general policing duties which he has anyways been doing since the accident. Kind regards, Dr Jason Sanders"""