I didn't know doctors were still prescribing in IUs (see article below).

An excellent  reason (as Paul has pointed out in the past) for standardizing on 
SI.

Ezra

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 Medical abbreviations 'pose risk'
Doctors are being warned that using abbreviations in medical notes is putting 
patients' lives at risk.

The UK's Medical Defence Union said difficulties often arose because 
abbreviations can have more than one meaning or might be misread.

Some patients have had the wrong limb removed or operated on and others have 
been given deadly drug doses, it said.

A recent US study of 30,000 medication errors, some fatal, showed 5% were 
linked to abbreviations in notes.

Common errors included abbreviating drug names and dosages, the Joint 
Commission found.

An example involved a 62-year-old patient on haemodialysis who was treated for 
a viral infection with the drug acyclovir.

The order for acyclovir was written as "acyclovir (unknown dose) with HD", 
meaning haemodialysis. Acyclovir should be adjusted for renal impairment and 
given only once daily.

However, the order was misread as TID (three times daily) and the patient died 
as a result.

Fatal errors

A UK audit by the paediatric department at Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, 
published in the Archives of Disease in Childhood in November, found instances 
where abbreviations used had caused confusion because they had multiple 
interpretations.

For example, "TOF" could be taken to mean "tetralogy of fallot" or 
"tracheo-oesophageal fistula" - two completely different conditions.

When presented with a selection of abbreviations, the study authors found 
paediatric doctors agreed on the interpretation of 56-94%, while other 
healthcare professionals recognised only 31-63%.

The authors also found that the use of abbreviations was inconsistent - 15% of 
the abbreviations used in medical notes appeared in the hospital's intranet 
dictionary while 17% appeared in a medical dictionary used by paediatric 
secretaries.

The MDU, which defends members' reputations when their clinical performance is 
called into question, advises doctors to use only the abbreviations or acronyms 
that are unambiguous and approved in their practice or hospital.

Dr Sally Old, MDU medico-legal adviser, said: "Abbreviations can cause 
confusion and risk patient safety.

"In one instance a diabetic patient was given a dose of 61 units of insulin 
because the notes say six international units - 6IU - were misinterpreted.

"Thankfully, the error was spotted and the patient was treated."

She said clear, concise communication was essential, particularly when care was 
provided by multi-disciplinary teams.

Kevin Cleary, of the National Patient Safety Agency, said: "Abbreviations in 
clinical notes, prescriptions and treatment charts should be kept to an 
absolute minimum. They cause confusion and present a risk to patients.

"The NPSA is aware of at least one patient death in the last 12 months where 
abbreviations were a contributory factor.

"In response to this incident, involving chemotherapy, we will be issuing 
guidance later this month on clear communication of treatment protocols." 

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