Sunteți pe pagina 1din 5

Medical slang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 1 of 5

Help us improve Wikipedia by supporting it financially.


Medical slang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Medical slang is a form of slang used by doctors, nurses, paramedics and other hospital or medical staff. Its central aspect is the use of facetious but impressivesounding acronyms and invented terminology to describe patients, co-workers or tricky situations. It serves, in other words, as a convenient if often gruesome code
between medical professionals. Medical slang is to be found in numerous languages but in English, in particular, it has entered popular culture via TV hospital/forensic
dramas such as Casualty, Holby City, ER, House MD, NCIS and Green Wing.

Contents








1 Limitations on use
2 Non-English
3 Annual round-up of medical slang
4 Terms
5 See also
6 References
7 Further reading

Limitations on use
In many countries, facetious or insulting acronyms are now considered unethical and unacceptable because patients can demand access to their medical records.
Medical facilities risk being sued by patients offended by the descriptions. Another reason for the decline is that facetious acronyms could be confused with genuine
medical terms and the wrong treatment administered.
In one of his annual reports (related by the BBC), medical slang collector Dr. Adam Fox cited an example where TTFO had been entered on a patients chart. This
acronym means told to fuck off (q.v.). When quizzed about the term, the doctor was quick-witted enough to say it meant to take fluids orally.[1] While this may or
may not be true, it indicates the danger of using informaland frequently insultingacronyms.
As a result, medical slang tends to be restricted to verbal use and to informal notes or E-mails which do not form part of a patients formal records. It may also be used
among medical staff outside of the hospital. It is not found on patients charts and, due to growing awareness of medical slang, often not used in front of patients
themselves.

Non-English
Although online medical slang dictionaries are primarily from English-speaking countries, non-English medical slang has been collected by Fox from elsewhere.
Brazilian medical slang includes PIMBA ("P Inchado Mulambo Bbado Atropelado" meaning "swollen-footed, drunk, run-over beggar"), Poliesculhambado (multimessed-up patient) and Trambiclnica (a "fraudulent clinic" staffed cheaply by medical students)[1].

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_slang

5.8.2008

Medical slang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 2 of 5

Annual round-up of medical slang


There is an annual round-up of the usage of medical slang by British physician Dr. Adam Fox of St Mary's Hospital, London. Fox has spent five years charting more
than 200 examples, regional and national terms and the general decline of medical slang. He believes that doctors have become more respectful of patients, which has
contributed to the decline. While its use may be declining in the medical profession, several dictionaries of the slang have been compiled on the internet.

Terms















404 moment - The point in a doctor's ward round when medical records cannot be located. Comes from internet error message, "404 - document not found". [2]
Agnostication - A substitute for prognostication. Term used to the describe the usually vain attempt to answer the question: "How long have I got, doc?" [2]
Appy - a person's appendix or a patient with appendicitis [3]
Ash cash - UK peculiarity of Registrars obtaining payment for signing cremation forms[4]
Baby Catcher - an obstetrician [3]
Bagging - manually helping a patient breathe using an Ambu bag attached to a mask that covers the face [3]
Bash cash - UK peculiarity of Registrars obtaining payment for medical reports on patients who have allegedly been assaulted[5]
Blamestorming - Apportioning of blame after the wrong leg or kidney is removed or some other particularly egregious foul-up happens. [2]
Blood Suckers/Leeches - those who take blood samples, such as laboratory technicians [3]
Bounceback - a patient who returns to the emergency department with the same complaints shortly after being released [3]
Bury the Hatchet accidentally leaving a surgical instrument inside a patient [3]
CBC - complete blood count; an all-purpose blood test used to diagnose different illnesses and conditions [3]
CNS-QNS - Central Nervous System - Quantity Not Sufficient. [1]
Code Brown - a faecal incontinence emergency. Often used by nurses and medical technicians requesting help cleaning up an unexpected bowel movement. [2]
[3]



















Code Yellow - a patient who has lost control of his or her bladder [3]
CTD - "Circling The Drain" [2] [6] [1] May also mean "Certain To Die"
DBI - "Dirt Bag Index", and multiplies the number of tattoos with the number of missing teeth to give an estimate of the number of days since the patient last
bathed. [1]
Departure lounge - geriatric ward [1]
Digging for Worms - varicose vein surgery [1]
Disco biscuits - Referring to the nightclub drug ecstasy. Usage: "The man in cubicle three looks like he's taken one too many disco biscuits. [2] Also means the
drug quaaludes.
DNR - do not resuscitate; a written request made by terminally ill or elderly patients who do not want extraordinary efforts made if they go into cardiac arrest, a
coma, etc. [3]
Doc in a Box - a small health-care center, usually with high staff turnover [3]
Donorcycle - nursing slang for a motorcycle, so named due to the amount of head trauma associated with motorcycle accident, but less so with the body, making
the perfect candidate for organ donation[7]
FLK - "Funny Looking Kid - for genetic quirks or inbreeding. [2] [3] [1]
Foley - a catheter used to drain the bladder of urine [3]
Freud Squad - the psychiatry department [3] [1]
FTD - Fixin' to Die [8]
Gas Passer - an anesthesiologist (also Gasser, Gas Man or Gaswallah) [3] [1]
GI Rounds - medical staff taking a break to go eat lunch/dinner

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_slang

5.8.2008

Medical slang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia





































Page 3 of 5

GOMER - "get out of my emergency room". Is a patient, usually poor or elderly, in the emergency room with a chronic, non-emergency condition. The name
was popularized by Samuel Shem in his novel The House of God.[9]
GLM - good looking mum [6] [1]
GPO - "Good for Parts Only [2] [6] [1]
GROLIES - Guardian Reader Of Low Intelligence in Ethnic Skirt. [1]
GSW - gunshot wound [3]
Handbag positive - confused patient (usually elderly lady) lying on hospital bed clutching handbag [1]
Hasselhoff - A term for any patient who shows up in the emergency room with an injury for which there is a bizarre explanation. Oringial Source: Baywatch
actor David Hasselhoff, who hit his head on a chandelier while shaving. The broken glass severed four tendons and an artery in his right arm. [2]
LOBNH - ("Lights On But Nobody Home) or the impressively bogus [2] [1]
MI - myocardial infarction; a heart attack [3]
M & Ms - mortality and morbidity conferences where doctors and other health-care professionals discuss mistakes and patient deaths [3]
MVA - motor vehicle accident [3]
NAD - Not Actually Done[10]
NFN - "Normal For Norfolk", (a rural English county.) [2] [1]
O-sign - A patient is "giving the O-sign" who is is very sick, lying with his mouth open. This is followed by the Q-sign - when the tongue hangs out of the
mouth - when the patient becomes terminal. [2] [3]
Oligoneuronal meaning someone who is thick (not smart). [2]
PAFO - "Pissed And Fell Over" [2] [1]
PFO - see PAFO [1]
Pumpkin positive refers to the idea that a person's brain is so tiny that a penlight shone into their mouth will make their empty head gleam like a Halloween
pumpkin. [2] [1]
Q-sign - see O-Sign [2] [3]
Rear Admiral - a proctologist [3]
Rheumaholiday - rheumatology (considered by hard-pressed juniors to be a less busy dept) [1]
Rule of Five - means that if more than five of the patient's orifices are obscured by tubing, he has no chance of survival. [2]
Slasher - surgeon [1]
Shotgunning - ordering a wide variety of tests in the hope that one will show what's wrong with a patient [3]
Stat - from the Latin statinum, meaning immediately [3]
Testiculation - Description of a gesture typically used by hospital consultant "when holding forth on subject on which he or she has little knowledge". Gesture is
of an upturned hand with outstretched fingers pointed upwards, clutching an invisible pair of testicles. [2]
TEETH - tried everything else, try homeopathy.[6] [1]
Tox Screen - testing the blood for the level and type of drugs in a patient's system [3]
TTFO - Told To Fuck Off or To Take Fluids Orally. [1]
TTR - Tea Time Review [1]
UBI - "Unexplained Beer Injury" [2] [6] [3] [1]
Woolworth's Test - Anaesthetic term (if you can imagine patient shopping in Woolies, it's safe to give a general anaesthetic) [1]

See also




Acronyms in healthcare
List of medical abbreviations
Drug slang

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_slang

5.8.2008

Medical slang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 4 of 5

References
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

^ a b c e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "Doctor slang is a dying art", BBC (18 August, 2003). Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "404 moment - new medical slang", Agence France-Presse (December 21, 2007). Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Howstuffworks "Decoding 28 Medical Slang Terms"
^ Adam, Kate (1998). "Student soapbox: Doctors should care, not cash in". Retrieved on 2008-04-14.
^ Fox, Adam; Cahill, Pauline; Fertleman, Michael (2002). "Medical slang". Retrieved on 2008-04-14.
^ a b c d e Doctors deny insulting patients with slang
^ Transwiki:Donorcycle
^ "The Free Dictionary". Retrieved on 2008-03-12.
^ Michael Quinion (2001-09-15). "Gomer". World Wide Words.
^ Fox, Adam; Cahill, Pauline; Fertleman, Michael (2002). "Medical slang". Retrieved on 2008-04-14.

Further reading










Adam T. Fox, Michael Fertleman, Pauline Cahill, and Roger D. Palmer (2003). "Medical slang in British hospitals". Ethics and Behaviour 13 (2): 173189.
doi:10.1207/S15327019EB1302_04. PMID 15124632. Discussion of the "usage, derivation, and psychological, ethical, and legal aspects of slang
terminology in medicine" as well as a glossary of common UK medical slang terms
Adam T. Fox, Pauline Cahill, and Michael Fertleman (2002). "Medical slang" (PDF). British Medical Journal 324 (179): 179S.
doi:10.1136/bmj.324.7350.S179.
Paul S. McDonald (2002-08-24). "Slang in clinical practice". British Medical Journal 325 (7361): 444. doi:10.1136/bmj.325.7361.444/a. PMID 12193372.
Peter B. Hukill, A. L. H., and James L. Jackson (May 1961). "The Spoken Language of Medicine: Argot, Slang, Cant". American Speech 36 (2): 145151.
doi:10.2307/453853.
Renee R. Anspach (December 1988). "Notes on the Sociology of Medical Discourse: The Language of Case Presentation". Journal of Health and Social
Behavior 29 (4): 357375. doi:10.2307/2136869.
Genevieve Noone Parsons, Sara B. Kinsman, Charles L. Bosk, Pamela Sankar, and Peter A. Ubel (August 2001). "Between two worlds: Medical student
perceptions of humor and slang in the hospital setting". Journal of General Internal Medicine 16 (8): 544549. Springer New York. doi:10.1046/j.15251497.2001.016008544.x.
Coombs RH, Chopra S, Schenk DR, and Yutan E (April 1993). "Medical slang and its functions". Soc Sci Med. 36 (8): 987998. doi:10.1016/0277-9536(93)
90116-L.
Christopher Peterson (OctoberDecember 1998). "Medical slang in Rio de Janeiro, Brasil" (PDF). Cad Saude Publica 14 (4): 671682. doi:10.1590/S0102311X1998000400002.
"Doctor slang is a dying art", BBC News (2003-08-18).
National Lampoon. "Slang words that hospitals use, some are funny". totse.com.
Dragonqueen. "DOCTORS' SLANG, MEDICAL SLANG AND MEDICAL ACRONYMS". Medical Slang around the world
Online Housestaff Community features Top 5 Annoying Medical Terms

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_slang"


Categories: Occupational cryptolects | Medical slang | Medical lists
Hidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since December 2007


This page was last modified on 7 July 2008, at 22:00.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_slang

5.8.2008

Medical slang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Page 5 of 5

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_slang

5.8.2008

S-ar putea să vă placă și