Acronyms/Abbreviations

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Specializes in Rodeo Nursing (Neuro).

I've recently seen another poster have to ask for clarification on an abbreviation, and it occurs to me that it might be a worthwhile courtesy to adopt the convention of using the complete term or title the first time you use it in a thread. Thus, if I were starting a thread entitled "My CNA hit me," I would open with "Last night, my Certified Nurse Assistant punched me in the arm. Really hard. I don't think she liked me refering to her as 'my CNA.' So then, she gets a call and says, 'I'll be there in a minute. I'm busy punching my nurse.' This seems really unfair."

By the way, the example post is entirely hypothetical, even though this type of thing actually does happen to me quite a lot.

Specializes in mental health; hangover remedies.
Specializes in mental health; hangover remedies.

Mike: Ignore that idiot above.

I'd certainly appreciate it - I struggle with some abbreviations being somewhere on the bottom of the world.

Specializes in psych, addictions, hospice, education.

I find myself thinking...hmmm...I have no idea what that abbreviation means, lots of times, and I'm too lazy to think it through or ask...so I just go on to the next thing to read--maybe I'm missing something important!!

I like Mike's suggestion.

Specializes in Telemetry & Obs.

FWIW IDK if it's really WMW IMHO. :D

Silliness aside, it's truly a problem sometimes. I like your suggestion! :)

Specializes in Nursing Home ,Dementia Care,Neurology..

It would be useful to us 'furiners' who have to burn Google red-hot to keep up with some of the posts here!:uhoh3::uhoh3:

Specializes in Rodeo Nursing (Neuro).

We've recently moved away from paper Kardexes, but some docs still get a bit whimsical with pt's diagnoses. Had one awhile back with a "pre-syncopal episode." Medicine service, but being a neuro nurse, I'm thinking stroke--CVA/TIA (cerebral vascular accident/transient ischemic attack.) 10 hours into my shift, I'm calling doc to clarify orders on her heparin drip and just happen to ask why she's on it, so I could pass it on in report. Pt reported a history of A-fib, so I was sure that was it, but come to find out she's having a non ST-elevated MI. Pre-syncopal, eh? So I tell the nurse following me about the NSTEMI and she looks at me like I've been drinking. Yeah, nursing is holistic, but we really aren't a cardio floor, so I took an extra 15 seconds to tell her everything I know about an NSTEMI. Maybe 10 seconds. But, hey, I do know that wavy-line machine has something to do with the heart...

On the other end of it, I picked up a patient once with a diagnosis of SBO. Huh?

SDH I know (sub-dural hematoma). SAH I know (sub-arachnoid hemorrhage). Severe Body Odor--is that a Dx? Fortunately, I got it clarified in face-to-face updates after listening to report. Small bowel obstruction--oh, so that'll be sorta like an ileus, huh?

So, even within a facility, it can be useful to spell out the jargon.

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