Published Sep 8, 2012
bethannie
41 Posts
I have seen a few online forums and such about anesthesiologists and other doctors saying that the acronym 'MDA' was invented by CRNAs to devaluate the education of an MD and that MDA is a derogatory term. I always thought the 'A' in MDA stood for anesthesiology. Now I wonder what it means... What are your thoughts on this?
Beth
wtbcrna, MSN, DNP, CRNA
5,127 Posts
I have seen a few online forums and such about anesthesiologists and other doctors saying that the acronym ‘MDA’ was invented by CRNAs to devaluate the education of an MD and that MDA is a derogatory term. I always thought the ‘A’ in MDA stood for anesthesiology. Now I wonder what it means... What are your thoughts on this?Beth
MDA is just a way to abbreviate anesthesiologist. I have heard two theories on the origin of the term MDA. One was from an insurance company and the other was from an economist writing about reimbursement rates in anesthesia. The one thing that is certain is that the term was not invented by CRNAs, and it is not meant as derogatory. It is no more derogatory than saying GI doc, ER physician, ENT, FP etc.
loveanesthesia
870 Posts
I have seen a few online forums and such about anesthesiologists and other doctors saying that the acronym 'MDA' was invented by CRNAs to devaluate the education of an MD and that MDA is a derogatory term. I always thought the 'A' in MDA stood for anesthesiology. Now I wonder what it means... What are your thoughts on this?Beth
Some anestesiologists don't like it, for one thing not all are MD's, some are DO's(...and you see the problem with DOA). I've been told "I'm an MD just like the surgeon, the cardiologist, etc" I think some anesthesiologist feel it's an attempt to make them more like CRNAs.
foraneman
199 Posts
I have never heard the term "MDA" used in anything even remotely approaching a derogatory or disrespectful connotation in 25+ years. It is simply a shortcut for saying anesthesiologist, and frankly it is used almost exclusively amongst CRNAs and MDAs, as well as some OR staff for just that reason. If we say it to other colleagues or patients they have no idea what we are talking about. So how and to whom using it would 'devalue' their education I have no idea.
BCRNA
255 Posts
elkpark
14,633 Posts
My father was an anesthesiologist, practicing until fairly recently, and I've never encountered the term anywhere but on this board.
Let me google that for you
Try a google search it is a very common acronym.
aRNnAR
51 Posts
On the anesthesia records at the facility where I was trained & where I worked for several years, the spaces reserved for signatures had
________________________ CRNA
________________________ MDA
Obviously, our MDAs did not feel it is derogatory.