Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 CAD = Carbohydrate Addicts Diet This is the low carb diet that Oprah tried, basically low carb/low fat for 2 meals a day and then the 'reward' meal that must be eaten within an hour - starts with a salad and then equal amounts of protein, veggies and any carby treats you want. Generally people on CAD lose more slowly than on Atkins and never quite kick the carb cravings. OWL = on-going weight loss What happens after the 2 weeks of induction prior to maintenance Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 Ari, CAD is Carbohydrate Addicts Diet, and OWL in Ongoing Weight Loss...................CAD is another low carb program designed by the Dr's Heller........OWL is the stage in Atkins after induction referring to the number of carbs your body can have each day to continue losing.........Annie > >Can someone please tell me what CAD and OWL mean? >thanks >Ari > _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com Signature Creations by PANDY8 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 oops, that is what I get for not looking ahead on my mail, *wave* hi Kirstie!! Annie > >CAD = Carbohydrate Addicts Diet > This is the low carb diet that Oprah tried, basically low carb/low fat >for 2 meals a day and then the 'reward' meal that must be eaten within an >hour - starts with a salad and then equal amounts of protein, veggies and >any carby treats you want. Generally people on CAD lose more slowly than >on >Atkins and never quite kick the carb cravings. > >OWL = on-going weight loss > What happens after the 2 weeks of induction prior to maintenance > _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 oops, that is what I get for not looking ahead on my mail, *wave* hi Kirstie!! Annie > >CAD = Carbohydrate Addicts Diet > This is the low carb diet that Oprah tried, basically low carb/low fat >for 2 meals a day and then the 'reward' meal that must be eaten within an >hour - starts with a salad and then equal amounts of protein, veggies and >any carby treats you want. Generally people on CAD lose more slowly than >on >Atkins and never quite kick the carb cravings. > >OWL = on-going weight loss > What happens after the 2 weeks of induction prior to maintenance > _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2001 Report Share Posted May 3, 2001 Rennie, Most abbreviations are pronounced whenever possible, this would include cabbage for CABG and PEG which is obvious. I can't think of any others that might throw you, but I do know that hearing the word cabbage threw me the first time I heard it. Hope this helps, MG >>> " Rennie " 05/03/01 07:31AM >>> I have a newbie question. When you (generic you) post here about abbreviations like the " PEG " below, does the dictator say " peg " or does the dictator spell it out p-e-g? I'm not to the transcription part of my course and I'm curious about how it's actually verbalized by the dictator. I'm starting to learn abbreviations in my course but I haven't asked about this yet. What will I hear from the dictator when the abbreviation is pronounceable like " PEG " ? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie Career Step student 46/Texas Current specialty: Studying Applied Terminology - The Physical Examination ~Knowledge is power, but enthusiasm pulls the switch. - Ivern Bell ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- The previous Foley catheter PEG tube was deflated and removed successfully. TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to nmtc-unsubscribe PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2001 Report Share Posted May 3, 2001 Thank you, Margaret! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie Career Step student 46/Texas Current specialty: Studying Applied Terminology - The Physical Examination ~Knowledge is power, but enthusiasm pulls the switch. - Ivern Bell ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- Rennie, Most abbreviations are pronounced whenever possible, this would include cabbage for CABG and PEG which is obvious. I can't think of any others that might throw you, but I do know that hearing the word cabbage threw me the first time I heard it. Hope this helps, MG >>> " Rennie " 05/03/01 07:31AM >>> I have a newbie question. When you (generic you) post here about abbreviations like the " PEG " below, does the dictator say " peg " or does the dictator spell it out p-e-g? I'm not to the transcription part of my course and I'm curious about how it's actually verbalized by the dictator. I'm starting to learn abbreviations in my course but I haven't asked about this yet. What will I hear from the dictator when the abbreviation is pronounceable like " PEG " ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2001 Report Share Posted May 3, 2001 Thank you, Margaret! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie Career Step student 46/Texas Current specialty: Studying Applied Terminology - The Physical Examination ~Knowledge is power, but enthusiasm pulls the switch. - Ivern Bell ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- Rennie, Most abbreviations are pronounced whenever possible, this would include cabbage for CABG and PEG which is obvious. I can't think of any others that might throw you, but I do know that hearing the word cabbage threw me the first time I heard it. Hope this helps, MG >>> " Rennie " 05/03/01 07:31AM >>> I have a newbie question. When you (generic you) post here about abbreviations like the " PEG " below, does the dictator say " peg " or does the dictator spell it out p-e-g? I'm not to the transcription part of my course and I'm curious about how it's actually verbalized by the dictator. I'm starting to learn abbreviations in my course but I haven't asked about this yet. What will I hear from the dictator when the abbreviation is pronounceable like " PEG " ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 5:32:40 PM Eastern Daylight Time, vtruitt@... writes: << Well, actually, what I tell them is spell it out the first time it's used, put the abbreviation after the phrase in parentheses, and then use just the abbreviation, e.g. right coronary artery (RCA). Is this the way you do it? >> This would fall under my favorite rule... WSTPMTR.. Which means.. whoever signs the paycheck makes the rules (How's that for a new abbrevation? hehe) Anyway, the account specifics from my employer say I must spell them out unless the doctor says... PTCA.. that's capital P, capital T, capital C, capital A. You get the idea. I believe it's also in BOS that you NEVER NEVER use an abbreviation in an impression or a diagnosis (preop, postop, whatever). Just had to add my $0.02. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 5:41:46 PM Eastern Daylight Time, rennie@... writes: << Isn't it acceptable to abbreviate in the laboratory data section of the report, though? >> Yes, I forgot about that in my example... the abbreviations are OK in the lab portion of the report, but where I work, it's type what they say.. If they PT they get PT, and if they say prothrombin time, that's what they get. The exceptions to that are slang, such as " crit " which is transcribed as hematocrit. Another $0.02 from me Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:04:55 PM Eastern Daylight Time, MGrant@... writes: << Another one that I don't like to see in the labs is H & H with two numbers following it. I just think it is much easier to read as hemoglobin then the number and hematocrit then the number. I have one doc who loves to say things like H & H and then give two numbers, then BUN and creatinine and give two numbers, then sodium and potassium and then give two numbers. To me it gets the reader too confused as to what value goes with which lab. Margaret >> We have quite a few docs who do that as well. I usually have my LRN up when I'm doing labs (I always forget the normals so I have them all listed under normal labs in LRN), and when they do that, especially H & H (which I have as a macro that expands to hemoglobin and hematocrit).. I make sure he's got them in the right order.. Hgb first and Hct second. If not, I put them where they go. Usually they do give them in order though, thank goodness. But I do see your point that it would be very confusing. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:24:33 PM Eastern Daylight Time, MGrant@... writes: << Rennie, Sorry, I do not change sed to sedation rate but I might change it to sedimentation rate. Actually I do use the abbreviation sed rate but I'm not sure what Jan's employer would say about that, since sed rate is actually slang for erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Sorry, I guess I am not as good as I thought about " set rules " when it comes to the lab section. Will have to apologize to Rennie and other newbies, Margaret >> Sed rate gets expanded to sedimentation rate... I have a macro for it. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:24:33 PM Eastern Daylight Time, MGrant@... writes: << Rennie, Sorry, I do not change sed to sedation rate but I might change it to sedimentation rate. Actually I do use the abbreviation sed rate but I'm not sure what Jan's employer would say about that, since sed rate is actually slang for erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Sorry, I guess I am not as good as I thought about " set rules " when it comes to the lab section. Will have to apologize to Rennie and other newbies, Margaret >> Sed rate gets expanded to sedimentation rate... I have a macro for it. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:24:33 PM Eastern Daylight Time, MGrant@... writes: << Rennie, Sorry, I do not change sed to sedation rate but I might change it to sedimentation rate. Actually I do use the abbreviation sed rate but I'm not sure what Jan's employer would say about that, since sed rate is actually slang for erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Sorry, I guess I am not as good as I thought about " set rules " when it comes to the lab section. Will have to apologize to Rennie and other newbies, Margaret >> Sed rate gets expanded to sedimentation rate... I have a macro for it. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:59:04 PM Eastern Daylight Time, robhay@... writes: << abbreviations in the lab section and for vital signs >> See now this is where it gets a bit confusing.. We can abbreviate in the lab area as long as we don't use slang (like crit or sed rate <grin>), but temperature, blood pressure, pulse, respirations, and oxygen saturation have to be spelled out. By the way, the account specs (rules) for this group of hospitals I work for is like 10 pages long.. Are you surprised? LOL Needless to say, the only way I can keep my sanity with all these whys and wherefores is macros, macros, and more macros I made a macro for each doctor's PE and ROS.... then basically I can go and fill in the blanks. I can't imagine never getting the same doctor twice... Most of my high line counts are when I get doctors I've been doing for 11 years now and I pretty much know what they are going to say before they say it. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:59:04 PM Eastern Daylight Time, robhay@... writes: << abbreviations in the lab section and for vital signs >> See now this is where it gets a bit confusing.. We can abbreviate in the lab area as long as we don't use slang (like crit or sed rate <grin>), but temperature, blood pressure, pulse, respirations, and oxygen saturation have to be spelled out. By the way, the account specs (rules) for this group of hospitals I work for is like 10 pages long.. Are you surprised? LOL Needless to say, the only way I can keep my sanity with all these whys and wherefores is macros, macros, and more macros I made a macro for each doctor's PE and ROS.... then basically I can go and fill in the blanks. I can't imagine never getting the same doctor twice... Most of my high line counts are when I get doctors I've been doing for 11 years now and I pretty much know what they are going to say before they say it. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 In a message dated 06-26-01 6:59:04 PM Eastern Daylight Time, robhay@... writes: << abbreviations in the lab section and for vital signs >> See now this is where it gets a bit confusing.. We can abbreviate in the lab area as long as we don't use slang (like crit or sed rate <grin>), but temperature, blood pressure, pulse, respirations, and oxygen saturation have to be spelled out. By the way, the account specs (rules) for this group of hospitals I work for is like 10 pages long.. Are you surprised? LOL Needless to say, the only way I can keep my sanity with all these whys and wherefores is macros, macros, and more macros I made a macro for each doctor's PE and ROS.... then basically I can go and fill in the blanks. I can't imagine never getting the same doctor twice... Most of my high line counts are when I get doctors I've been doing for 11 years now and I pretty much know what they are going to say before they say it. Jan " Typing is my life " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Thanks. This is a discharge summary but I will remember that advice. God Bless. Aliceanne On Tue, 26 Jun 2001 17:04:35 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Aliceanne, I can sure understand that thinking. But procedures, > caths, etc., are all the same. Especially remember to spell it out > in the precath and postcath diagnosis, impression, conclusions, etc. > Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/26/01 05:01PM >>> > That is what I would normally do but since this is a procedure I > wasn't > sure if that was common practice. I guess I feel procedures should > have > their own common lingo and not need to be spelled out? Guess I am > wrong. > Thanks. > Aliceanne > On Tue, 26 Jun 2001 16:48:16 -0400 " Margaret Grant " > > writes: > > Aliceanne, I usually spell them out the first time they are used, > but > > after that I go ahead and use the abbreviation. You never know > when > > the insurance adjuster may be new to the business, coming across > > something for the first time, and is afraid to ask any questions. > > > It is also possible that the family may get the report and they > > would not be aware of what these abbreviations mean. Just my > > opinion, Margaret > > > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/26/01 04:43PM >>> > > Do you people spell out abbreviations when given in a Cath > > procedure, > > like RCA, LV? > > Aliceanne > > > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > > nmtc-unsubscribe > > > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Valeria, You sure are teaching it correctly. I used to wonder about having to right it out all the time, but then someone told me about the fact that nonmedical people occasionally get hold of the record, such as the insurance adjuster or the family, and they don't know what all those abbreviations stand for. That made sense to me, so I have been a lot more careful with all those abbreviations since then. Just drives me crazy when a new intern or medical student starts dictating and uses a whole bunch of new abbreviations that I can't find. We have been told not to worry about an abbreviation if we can't find it, but they still bug me. Especially the Ortho guys, who get down to the muscle groups and start with the EHL, FHL, etc. I try to right them out whenever possible, but sometimes it just gets too crazy trying to look up 5-8 abbreviations within a short sentence. So that is the one exception where I will go ahead and give them the abbreviations, otherwise it is spell it out the first time and then use the abbreviation. Margaret >>> Valeria Truitt 06/26/01 05:22PM >>> Margaret, I sure am glad you said that ( " if Margaret said it, you can take it to the bank! " ). That's what I've been teaching (or maybe preaching?) all these years, and some of my graduates have come back from " the job " and said that if the dictator says abbreviations, they key the abbreviations. Once they're employed graduates, I don't tell them what to do--but I'm glad to know that I'm telling the students the right thing. Well, actually, what I tell them is spell it out the first time it's used, put the abbreviation after the phrase in parentheses, and then use just the abbreviation, e.g. right coronary artery (RCA). Is this the way you do it? Valeria At 04:48 PM 6/26/2001, Margaret Grant wrote: >Aliceanne, I usually spell them out the first time they are used, but >after that I go ahead and use the abbreviation. You never know when the >insurance adjuster may be new to the business, coming across something for >the first time, and is afraid to ask any questions. It is also possible >that the family may get the report and they would not be aware of what >these abbreviations mean. Just my opinion, Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/26/01 04:43PM >>> >Do you people spell out abbreviations when given in a Cath procedure, >like RCA, LV? >Aliceanne > >TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to >nmtc-unsubscribe > >PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Isn't it acceptable to abbreviate in the laboratory data section of the report, though? I'm still trying to get all the DOS and DON'TS straight. Thanks in advance for your help. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie - Student Member of AAMT 46/Texas/nulligravida Career Step Student www.careerstep.com Current Specialty: Studying Applied Medical Terminology (Word Differentiation) and Beginning Transcription ~Find a job you love and you will never have to work again.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- Margaret, I sure am glad you said that ( " if Margaret said it, you can take it to the bank! " ). That's what I've been teaching (or maybe preaching?) all these years, and some of my graduates have come back from " the job " and said that if the dictator says abbreviations, they key the abbreviations. Once they're employed graduates, I don't tell them what to do--but I'm glad to know that I'm telling the students the right thing. Well, actually, what I tell them is spell it out the first time it's used, put the abbreviation after the phrase in parentheses, and then use just the abbreviation, e.g. right coronary artery (RCA). Is this the way you do it? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Sorry Rennie, you are correct. I use abbreviations throughout the laboratory section. However, I don't use chemical names, such as K for potassium, NA for sodium. Those are no-nos. But the commonly used abbreviations, such as WBC, CBC, RBC, alk phos, bicarb, etc., I do use. It may take awhile to get to knowing and understanding which are the commonly used abbreviations and which aren't, but you will get the hang of it. Margaret >>> " Rennie " 06/26/01 05:30PM >>> Isn't it acceptable to abbreviate in the laboratory data section of the report, though? I'm still trying to get all the DOS and DON'TS straight. Thanks in advance for your help. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie - Student Member of AAMT 46/Texas/nulligravida Career Step Student www.careerstep.com Current Specialty: Studying Applied Medical Terminology (Word Differentiation) and Beginning Transcription ~Find a job you love and you will never have to work again.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- Margaret, I sure am glad you said that ( " if Margaret said it, you can take it to the bank! " ). That's what I've been teaching (or maybe preaching?) all these years, and some of my graduates have come back from " the job " and said that if the dictator says abbreviations, they key the abbreviations. Once they're employed graduates, I don't tell them what to do--but I'm glad to know that I'm telling the students the right thing. Well, actually, what I tell them is spell it out the first time it's used, put the abbreviation after the phrase in parentheses, and then use just the abbreviation, e.g. right coronary artery (RCA). Is this the way you do it? TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to nmtc-unsubscribe PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Thank you! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie - Student Member of AAMT 46/Texas/nulligravida Career Step Student www.careerstep.com Current Specialty: Studying Applied Medical Terminology (Word Differentiation) and Beginning Transcription ~Find a job you love and you will never have to work again.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Re: Abbreviations Sorry Rennie, you are correct. I use abbreviations throughout the laboratory section. However, I don't use chemical names, such as K for potassium, NA for sodium. Those are no-nos. But the commonly used abbreviations, such as WBC, CBC, RBC, alk phos, bicarb, etc., I do use. It may take awhile to get to knowing and understanding which are the commonly used abbreviations and which aren't, but you will get the hang of it. Margaret Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 And.......do you change " sed " to sedation rate in the lab section? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie - Student Member of AAMT 46/Texas/nulligravida Career Step Student www.careerstep.com Current Specialty: Studying Applied Medical Terminology (Word Differentiation) and Beginning Transcription ~Find a job you love and you will never have to work again.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- Yes, I forgot about that in my example... the abbreviations are OK in the lab portion of the report, but where I work, it's type what they say.. If they PT they get PT, and if they say prothrombin time, that's what they get. The exceptions to that are slang, such as " crit " which is transcribed as hematocrit. Another $0.02 from me Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Jan, " crit " is a great example of " slang " versus " accepted abbreviation " which I was trying to get across in my note to Rennie. Thanks for bringing it up, as I couldn't think of any at the time. Whenever I hear " crit " it is definitely spelled out. Another one that I don't like to see in the labs is H & H with two numbers following it. I just think it is much easier to read as hemoglobin then the number and hematocrit then the number. I have one doc who loves to say things like H & H and then give two numbers, then BUN and creatinine and give two numbers, then sodium and potassium and then give two numbers. To me it gets the reader too confused as to what value goes with which lab. Margaret >>> 06/26/01 05:57PM >>> In a message dated 06-26-01 5:41:46 PM Eastern Daylight Time, rennie@... writes: << Isn't it acceptable to abbreviate in the laboratory data section of the report, though? >> Yes, I forgot about that in my example... the abbreviations are OK in the lab portion of the report, but where I work, it's type what they say.. If they PT they get PT, and if they say prothrombin time, that's what they get. The exceptions to that are slang, such as " crit " which is transcribed as hematocrit. Another $0.02 from me Jan " Typing is my life " TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to nmtc-unsubscribe PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Rennie, Sorry, I do not change sed to sedation rate but I might change it to sedimentation rate. Actually I do use the abbreviation sed rate but I'm not sure what Jan's employer would say about that, since sed rate is actually slang for erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Sorry, I guess I am not as good as I thought about " set rules " when it comes to the lab section. Will have to apologize to Rennie and other newbies, Margaret >>> " Rennie " 06/26/01 06:03PM >>> And.......do you change " sed " to sedation rate in the lab section? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie - Student Member of AAMT 46/Texas/nulligravida Career Step Student www.careerstep.com Current Specialty: Studying Applied Medical Terminology (Word Differentiation) and Beginning Transcription ~Find a job you love and you will never have to work again.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- Yes, I forgot about that in my example... the abbreviations are OK in the lab portion of the report, but where I work, it's type what they say.. If they PT they get PT, and if they say prothrombin time, that's what they get. The exceptions to that are slang, such as " crit " which is transcribed as hematocrit. Another $0.02 from me TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to nmtc-unsubscribe PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2001 Report Share Posted June 26, 2001 Okay we are back to yes for the diagnosis and preop etc. But for the actual procedure if the doctor says RCA I have always typed it (or in discharge summary, not the actual diagnosis but the hospital course, as dictated. Something told me to question it this time though as prior to working here I did not use BOS and the doctors did not even know there was an MT profession. Thanks and I am glad I inititated this discussion. Aliceanne On Tue, 26 Jun 2001 18:04:37 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Jan, " crit " is a great example of " slang " versus " accepted > abbreviation " which I was trying to get across in my note to Rennie. > Thanks for bringing it up, as I couldn't think of any at the time. > Whenever I hear " crit " it is definitely spelled out. > > Another one that I don't like to see in the labs is H & H with two > numbers following it. I just think it is much easier to read as > hemoglobin then the number and hematocrit then the number. I have > one doc who loves to say things like H & H and then give two numbers, > then BUN and creatinine and give two numbers, then sodium and > potassium and then give two numbers. To me it gets the reader too > confused as to what value goes with which lab. Margaret > > >>> 06/26/01 05:57PM >>> > In a message dated 06-26-01 5:41:46 PM Eastern Daylight Time, > rennie@... writes: > > << Isn't it acceptable to abbreviate in the laboratory data section > of the > report, though? >> > > Yes, I forgot about that in my example... the abbreviations are OK > in the lab > portion of the report, but where I work, it's type what they say.. > If they PT > they get PT, and if they say prothrombin time, that's what they get. > The > exceptions to that are slang, such as " crit " which is transcribed as > > hematocrit. Another $0.02 from me > > Jan " Typing is my life " > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > nmtc-unsubscribe > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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