Not sure why it won't let me make another sandbox, but I have this one and nightsmaiden-2. Was hoping to make a third and put the seeking stones there, but eh. It's in my OneNote now. I have smaller stuff to put here to try first.
Item #: SCP-####
Object Class: Safe
Containment Measures: Instances are to be kept in suitably-sized, numbered individual containment enclosures and stored as a single lot in a secure storage locker, with the exception of any instances currently actively employed in testing or other active use. Batteries of each instance are to be removed and kept in each enclosure when instances are not actively in use, and installed for active use. Batteries are to be checked for charge every three months when in storage and monthly when in use outside of testing.
Access for testing or other use must be approved by both the head researcher currently handling SCP-#### and the medical supervisor in charge of the intended subject. Any instance removed from primary storage must be signed into the custody of a specific researcher, medical supervisor, or agent, with arrangements to maintain custody and return the instance to primary storage upon the subject's death if used outside of testing.
Instances currently in containment, their capacity and features, their current location, and their current custodians are to be logged in MANIFEST-####-1
Description:
SCP-#### are several models of large plastic medication organizers with battery-operated alarms and compartments to store medication. They are marked on the back with the model number, the brand "STA-Healthy Medication Organizer", and the manufacturer, "Perfect Safety, Ltd.". Models currently in containment are marked as 1, 3, and 7.
All known models utilize sticks of 7 transparent plastic storage compartments, arranged vertically. Each compartment is externally 3cm on a side, with doors that pressure-latch in the manner standard for such organizers. Each compartment is marked on the front with a period of the day: "Wake", "Morn", "Day", " Mid", "Eve", "Bed", and "Nite", from top to bottom. Markings are in debossed lettering with blue paint. Models vary in how individual sticks are distinguished and how they mount to the base unit.
Each model also acommodates one or more additional sticks of 7 compartments, labeled PRN and numbered individually. These are otherwise identical to the time-of-day compartments.
The environment within the compartments is anomalous. It appears to have no limit to its capacity so long as the items within meet the operating standards of the unit, and the environment is maintained at a temperature of 20° C with 30% relative humidity. Both conditions are maintained irrespective of external environment as long as the compartment is closed and the physical structure of the compartment is intact.
Model 1 uses 7 time-of day sticks, each labeled with a day of the week and mounted flat with their openings up. It also allows for 1 PRN stick, labeler 1-7. The alarm is to the left of the compartments, with an LCD display that shows the current time and the time of the next alarm, including AM/PM indicators, and a battery level indicator. There are four buttons below the display, marked "Time", "Alarm", "Mode", and "+", which are used to set the time and up to seven alarms, which repeat at the same times daily. There is an area above the display for a sticker indicating patient name, and a battery compartment on the back that holds 2 standard AAA batteries. The batteries can be removed for thirty seconds before the memory of the device is cleared. The alarm is a loud, high-pitched beeping sound, which plays for thirty seconds or until a button is pressed.
Model 3 uses 31 time-of-day sticks, numbered on their top ends and mounting into slots vertically with the openings forward, numbers visible. It also acommodates 11 PRN sticks, lettered A-K, compartments numbered sequentially. There are 6 rows of 7 slots for the compartment sticks, allowing the sticks to be arranged appropriately for any calendar month. The alarm is to the left of the compartments, with an LCD display that shows patient name, current time, day of the week, day of the month, and the time, weekday, and day of the month of the next alarm. There is a keyboard below the display with buttons "↑", " V", "Bksp", "Enter", "Space", a full Roman alphabet, a full set of diacritic marks, a hyphen, and a full set of Arabic numerals. There is a battery compartment on the back, which holds a pair of standard AA batteries. The batteries can be removed for thirty seconds before the memory of the device is cleared. The alarm is an alternating loud beep and low buzz, which continues until a button is pressed.
Model 7 instances are identical in construction to model 3 units, with the exception of the addition of a cubic refrigeration section on the right side of the item, with a door that opens upwards and to the right. The exterior measurement of this section is 22cm on a side, matching the height and depth of the compartment section. The interior has an anomalous capacity similar to that of the compartments, and a non-anomalous capacity of 20 cm cubed.
This refrigeration unit operates anomalously, requiring no source of outside power to maintain an air temperature of 4° Celsius, although it does have a power socket and a separate adapter that indicates it provides 12v DC power. The plug on the adapter does not match any standard configuration, and the adapter does not provide any power, but a small green light on the refrigeration section does activate when the adapter is plugged into a power source and connected to the object.
All models appear to share the same anomalous rules of operation. They are assigned to a patient by either labeling the unit in the appropriate area (Model 1) or entering the patient name electronically (Models 3 and 7).
When an instance becomes assigned to a subject, that subject is designated Subject ####-#, numbered to match the instance of SCP-#### assigned to them. Assignment appears to last for the remainder of the Subject's life. Removal of name label, deletion of electronically stored name, or removal of batteries in models 3 or 7 for more than 30 seconds results in death of the subject via immediate relapse of all medical conditions, all adverse reactions of Treatment Items, all interaction syndromes of Treatment Items, and all cessation syndromes of Treatment Items, occurring simultaneously.
When not assigned to a patient, the doors to compartments, despite lacking any sort of locking mechanism, and the door to the refrigeration unit, if present, will "jam" in their current position, either open or closed, and sticks cannot be removed from the base or latched into place.
All substances prescribed or recommended in a professional capacity to Subject by by medical professionals considered qualified by their discipline to prescribe medication or similar treatment and in line with the current state of knowledge of the relevant discipline become Treatment Items for that subject at the time the prescription is written or the recommendation is made. Note that this includes nonprescription items such as over-the-counter medications and special diets.
When assigned to a Subject, all doors and latching mechanisms function normally so long as only Treatment Items are placed in the compartments. No limit has been found for the amount of Treatment Items that can be stored as long as the item is of a shape and size that can fit through the opening of the compartment or refrigeration section. If anything other than Treatment Items is placed in a compartment or refrigeration section, it can only occupy the non-anomalous volume of the compartment (3 cm or 20 cm cube) and it disappears when the door is closed.
All Treatment Items can and must be loaded into the appropriate compartments, and appropriate alarms set, within one week. If this is done correctly, Anomalous Effect A of the object is triggered.
Allowing any dose of Treatment Items to run out such that there is nothing for the relevant treatment when it is due, placement of Treatment In the incorrect compartments and closing the door, failure to set relevant alarms, or failure to take/apply treatment within half an hour after it is due triggers Anomalous Effect B.
This is relative to the actual instructions provided when the Treatment Item is prescribed/recommended, not the intentions of the prescriber or the alarms in the device, which seem to be non-anomalous once set.
Anomalous Effect A: Treatment effectiveness is perfectly correlated with subject compliance with treatment. If subject is perfectly compliant with treatment, the treatment will be 100% effective, irrespective of normal odds of effectiveness. Likewise, there are no side effects, even those that are normally inevitable with such treatment.
Anomalous Effect B: Noncompliance with treatment likewise correlates 100% with adverse effects appropriate to the Treatment Item. The mechanism of selection of adverse effects is not currently understood and is suspected to be random within three categories.
Observed effects of missed doses include return of symptoms, worsening of treated conditions, and abrupt-cessation syndromes, even when a single missed dose would normally have little to no effect. These effects continue until treatment is resumed, and a new effect is added for every missed dose until all known adverse reactions have been applied, up to and including death of the subject.
Observed effects of additional doses or taking the medication from the wrong compartment include known side effects of the relevant Treatment Item, medication interactions with other Treatment Items, and overdose syndromes associated with the relevant Treatment Item, up to and including death of the subject.
Taking any medication or similar substance not prewcribed or recommended by the medical professional/s associated with the Treatment Items managed by the instance of SCP-####, including proscribed foods and alcohol, but not including normal food, drink, or alcohol if not contraindicated or disallowed as part of treatment, triggers interaction syndromes, side effects of the added substance, and exacerbation of the condition the additional substances are meant to treat, up to and including death of the subject.






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