I haven't heard anyone say "stat" instead of "sat" but...
My personal pet peeves:
"phernegan" or some other twisted form of "phenergan"
"Nucular" to which I respond "How do you spell that?". It's "nuclear" people!
"Scrip"...as in, "Lucky1RN, what do you think of this patient's rhythm scrip?" Uh...what's a scrip? Do you mean "strip"?
"Sontimeter"...as in "the patient's wound is 2 sontimeters wide". It's "centimeter". Do you say a gumball costs 1 sont? Nooooo.
Yeah, I'm a bit picky about language! I could go on and on. Expresso instead of espresso. Orientated instead of oriented. Prostrate instead of prostate. Ok...I'll shut up now.
We need to take geographic location into consideration however. If you ever have a chance to travel the country, you should find the differences in annunciation and language articulation interesting. I know language differences exist in most other countries as well.
I was raised up north and know my annunciation of specific words is considered strange by the people I currently live and work around. My articulation of words such as carotid and trauma are considered strange by many people in the southwest.
Risperdal being pronounced "risper-I-dal" chaps my butt. So does "zyprex-I-a" for Zyprexa. I can handle alternate pronunciations, but don't add letters that aren't there!
Phar-nix and lar-nix are butt chappers as well.
Nare or phalange are irritating. These two I get from doctors lots and lots.
I am a medical transcriptionist right now, so I hear a few head scratchers from doctors, PAs, and NPs. The one that irritated me the most was probably this nurse practitioner who had a habit of mispronouncing words to the point of me not being able to tell from context what the heck she was saying. Her weirdest one, I think, was one I knew what she wanted to say, though. She decided she didn't like to "palpate" anything anymore and started dictating that she "palpitated the abdomen for masses or hepatosplenomegaly."
I definitely hear my share of ESLs who don't pronounce things we consider as correct pronunciation, but that doesn't count so much as a mispronunciation to me--some sounds in English are not present in other languages and vice versa and are unable to be pronounced by a non-native speaker.
Now I'm off on a tangent of sorts!
I'm not really bothered when pt's or family members say things incorrectly. There are some things that the general public just doesn't know....but I get really annoyed when healthcare workers/professionals don't use or say the words correctly. It's not so much that regional accents bother me, it's the addition or subtraction of letters and/or entire syllables that gets to me.
btw, SONTimeter bugs the heck out of me too! lol
lucky1RN said:I haven't heard anyone say "stat" instead of "sat" but...My personal pet peeves:
"pheRNegan" or some other twisted form of "phenergan"
"Nucular" to which I respond "How do you spell that?". It's "nuclear" people!
"Scrip"...as in, "Lucky1RN, what do you think of this patient's rhythm scrip?" Uh...what's a scrip? Do you mean "strip"?
"Sontimeter"...as in "the patient's wound is 2 sontimeters wide". It's "centimeter". Do you say a gumball costs 1 sont? Nooooo.
Yeah, I'm a bit picky about language! I could go on and on. Expresso instead of espresso. Orientated instead of oriented. Prostrate instead of prostate. OK...I'll shut up now.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/centimeter
Actually, if you go here, there's 2 pronunciations of centimeter.
SheriLynnRN
102 Posts
Doesn't it just drive you insane when someone tells you that Mr. Smith's O2 STAT is 96%?
It's O2 SAT people! Sat, short for saturation. I even hear respiratory therapists saying this. I am sooooo tempted to say something next time, but I know it's just petty, so I needed to vent here. Thank you.