>>> Michael Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 10/08/2004 10:00:52 >>>
> i've worked within medicine in my previous life as an ER doc and guess 
> what
> there is no formal naming standardisation within it, at least not one that 
> there is any sort of agreement over, though people have been trying for 
> centuries to sort something out.
> 
> -three letter acronym anyone?

I always find the adrenaline/epinephrin naming clash amusing and confusing.  Does it 
stem from a company Trademarking "adrenaline" in the USA?  Because, as far as I can 
tell, everyone uses "adrenaline" as the generic term for the hormone of the same name 
here in the UK.

Acronyms have their own pitfalls too...  I've heard of numerous cases where a 
derogotary and unprofessional acronym was written on/in some medical notes (PITA, TWOT 
etc).  Perhaps it should be standard practice that when the patient asks to have 
his/her medical notes explained to him/her, as s/he is quite entitled under the Data 
Protection Act, the member of staff writing said comment should explain its medical 
meaning and clinical significance.

The scary part of acronyms comes with overloading.  One derogotary (and very 
unprofessional) acronym I've heard about from a number of years ago was "NFR", meant 
to stand for "Normal For Ridgehill" (a region with which the local hospital had some 
"experience").

NFR is more commonly used as an abbreviation for: Not For Resuscitation; from what I 
understand, NFR is a quite detailed set of circumstances, changing on a frequent 
basis, stipulating when somebody does not need resuscitation, i.e. are already beyond 
medical help.

[disclaimer: i'm not a medic, so any corrections will be educational for me too!]

Marek


_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html

Reply via email to