The precise history of rectal thermometry is largely unknown, but
medical thermometers have long been made in a tube shape that fits into the anus. Medical literature shows the practice dating back to at least the 18th century, and it is probable that rectal thermometry was thought to be a safer alternative to oral temperature-taking, due to the use of
mercury and other toxic chemicals in early thermometers. In 1966,
Time Magazine noted: Near dawn every morning, a nurse walks into the hospital room, wakes the patient and subjects him to what for many remains a humiliating procedure, although it has become routine: insertion of a rectal thermometer. As thermometry-related technology improves in the 21st century, rectal thermometry is becoming less common, but it is still the preferred method for taking the temperature of infants and pets. ==Use and procedure==