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If you follow BOS, they say never to abbreviate

Posted By: meds. (NM) on 2009-02-15
In Reply to: the use of the term "epi" vrs. epinephrine - Sarah

Subject: If you follow BOS, they say never to abbreviate

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follow-up is the noun/adjective. follow up is the verb.
Subject: follow-up is the noun/adjective. follow up is the verb.

I prefer to hyphen follow-up when used as a noun or adjective.


example: She will return in 3 weeks for follow-up (or followup). She will return in 3 weeks for a follow-up visit (used as adjective here).


She will follow up in 3 months (used as verb)


Follow-up, follow up, followup all correct
Subject: Follow-up, follow up, followup all correct

I have a follow-up appointment tomorrow.


I need to follow up with my doctor.


I am scheduled for followup later this month.


follow up if used as a verb and follow-up as a noun. SM
Subject: follow up if used as a verb and follow-up as a noun. SM

For Example:


The patient will follow up in my office.


The patient will be seen for follow-up in my office.


My understanding has always been that follow-up and followup were the same.  It was more of a personal preference whether you used the hyphen or used one word; however follow up is always used when used as a verb.


She will follow up with me(v)/will be seen in followup(n); will have a follow-up visit (adj)
Subject: She will follow up with me(v)/will be seen in followup(n); will have a follow-up visit (adj)

x
Followup/follow-up/follow up. SM
Subject: Followup/follow-up/follow up. SM

A doctor can follow up with a patient during a follow-up visit (note that the adjectival form requires a hyphen). Neither phrase should be turned into a single hyphenless word.


follow up versus follow-up. SM
Subject: follow up versus follow-up. SM

Would someone be willing to give examples of when to use the hyphen or not to use?  Thanks.
follow up v follow-up v followup
Subject: follow up v follow-up v followup

If you can use the word "the" directly in front of the words "follow up", then it needs to be one word. That is the "official" note from my QA. Have a great day.
Follow up:followup: follow-up
Subject: Follow up:followup: follow-up

Ok,, been at this for years,, I think i have it finally and then a QA will correct followup, follow up, or follow-up.  I have read and reread the explanation in all the books.. I am looking for someone to "splain to me in english Lucy".  I know will follow up is correct,, he has a follow-up appointment, but I seem to get messed up with followup versus follow up. I know the verb and none definition but it does not soak in... HELP


 


Usually just abbreviate it as DNR.
Subject: Usually just abbreviate it as DNR.


What is the correct way to abbreviate
Subject: What is the correct way to abbreviate

no message
how do you abbreviate micrograms?
Subject: how do you abbreviate micrograms?


how to abbreviate subcutaneous
Subject: how to abbreviate subcutaneous

I cannot for the life of me remember how to abbreviate subcutaneous.  I have subcu but I just keep thinking that does not look right. 


Thanks


how do you abbreviate Pharm D?
Subject: how do you abbreviate Pharm D?

periods or no periods, dash or no dash?  My account is verbatim and abbreviations must be typed as written, not expanded.


Any suggestions?


It's safer not to abbreviate. :)
Subject: It's safer not to abbreviate. :)

Unless as you say, the account specifies to transcribe verbatim.
how to abbreviate 10 to the third per microliter
Subject: how to abbreviate 10 to the third per microliter

platelet count of 506, with a reference range of 170-400 10 to the third per microliter.
If the dictator does not abbreviate something,
Subject: If the dictator does not abbreviate something,

we shouldn't either. Only use abbreviations when they are dictated.
My Abbreviate book says IGIM
Subject: My Abbreviate book says IGIM

is immune globulin intramuscular, and IgG is just plain immunoglobulin G...dunno if that's what you're lookin for though.


The only thing I see in my Abbreviate book is:
Subject: The only thing I see in my Abbreviate book is:

ADPKD (all together) for autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease...if that is what yer lookin' for.


 



Accordin' to my Abbreviate book here...
Subject: Accordin' to my Abbreviate book here...

ASA IV is a patient with incapacitating systemic disease.
put in the comma, do not abbreviate state nm
Subject: put in the comma, do not abbreviate state nm


My Abbreviate book gives 2 answers...
Subject: My Abbreviate book gives 2 answers...

FAST:  fetal acoustic stimulation testing or fluorescent allergosorbent technique.


Dunno if that helps you or not but thought I'd share that is all. 



Is it acceptable to abbreviate it, as she does say quant.
Subject: Is it acceptable to abbreviate it, as she does say quant.


no - only abbreviate metric measurements
Subject: no - only abbreviate metric measurements

not pounds, ounces, etc.
I spell it out if before the drug, abbreviate if
Subject: I spell it out if before the drug, abbreviate if

x
how to abbreviate miles per hour
What is the correct way to abbreviate miles per hour in a medical report? Is mph ok?


I don't abbreviate but if verbatim, I guess a-fib or A-fib. Gee. I dunno because SM
Subject: I don't abbreviate but if verbatim, I guess a-fib or A-fib. Gee. I dunno because SM

I just don't use slang words in my transcription. I hate those vertabim accounts, don't you?
One more querstion - should we abbreviate versus in a report?
Subject: One more querstion - should we abbreviate versus in a report?

vs. or write out versus.  If we can abbreviate, is it okay to abbreviate in numbered diagnoses list?


BOS2 says DO NOT abbreviate medication names.
Subject: BOS2 says DO NOT abbreviate medication names.

x
mph is the correct way to abbreviate miles per hours, however,
Subject: mph is the correct way to abbreviate miles per hours, however,

if that is what he dictates, then I would use mph, or you can also spell it out miles per hour, both are acceptable, sometimes also depends on the client preference.  If you spell it out though, you can get more characters for your line count!
I do abbreviate it and no one has corrected me as of yet. About the numbered diagnoses list, i don&
Subject: I do abbreviate it and no one has corrected me as of yet. About the numbered diagnoses list, i don't know


follow-up - how I would...
Subject: follow-up - how I would...

TITLE OF PROCEDURE:
Echocardiogram

FINDINGS
Left atrium - grossly normal. Mitral valve - grossly normal valve leaflet morphology and motion.
Left ventricle - normal systolic and diastolic dimensions, grossly normal segmental wall motion and systolic function overall. Endocardium - somewhat difficult to visualize. Estimated ejection fraction - 50-55%.
Aortic valve - mildly sclerotic valve leaflets with no frank stenosis or regurgitation.
Aortic root - normal.
(Right?) atrium - normal. Tricuspid valve - normal. Right ventricle - normal size and systolic function.
The pulmonic valve is normal.
Pericardium is normal.
No significant effusion.
Intracardiac masses or thrombi - none observed.

COMMENTS: Somewhat technically limited study due to acoustic window quality.

IMPRESSION:
1. Grossly normal left ventricular size and systolic function.
2. No evidence of valvular heart disease.

follow-up
Subject: follow-up

In the context you are quoting (noun), I would use follow-up.  If you are using the words as a verb (e.g. ...he will follow up in 6 weeks...), then separate the words with a space.  Hope that helps.


Thanks, will follow-up.
Subject: Thanks, will follow-up.


follow up Q
Subject: follow up Q

i thought, we MTs, should only transcribe what the doctor had dictated? No more, no less... How come there were 2 impression?
follow up
Subject: follow up

hmmmm. I listened to it again and it does not seem to be that. I will have to flag it and ask. This doc has a strong accent. He pronounces 'verbal' as 'ware - i - bile' and it took me forever to figure out what he meant.
follow up
Subject: follow up

Thank you....although I guess some people still use a hyphen sometimes?  Well, I'll leave it out.


Cindi


 


Follow-up
Subject: Follow-up

She is dictating a list of medication allergies and says Q-Tech.  Nothing else.  Not much help! 


What if follow up is used like this.... SM
Subject: What if follow up is used like this.... SM

He would be happy to see her in the office a follow-up.


follow up
Subject: follow up

This is how I remember it.
follow up = verb
followup = noun

He will "follow up" next week.

Replace follow up with the word "eat". If the sentence still makes sense then it is a verb.

He will "eat" next week.

That is the only way I can remember it! Good luck!
follow-up
Subject: follow-up

He keeps dictating "follow dash up"


I thought it was followup or follow up.  Not follow-up. 


 


I don't know what to do


Follow up yet again
Subject: Follow up yet again

This is how I use it. 


follow up - verb  The patient will follow up with so and so.


follow-up - adjective  follow-up appointment


followup - noun  The patient will return for a followup.


Of course, people have different opinions.  I think the accepted latest BOS is that followup is used for noun and adjective now and follow up is used for verb. 


 


 


Follow-up has its uses
Subject: Follow-up has its uses

I was taught that when followup is a noun, it is one word. When it is a verb, follow up is two words, no hyphen. When it is an adjective with the noun it is modifiying immediately following, it should be hyphenated.

This is a followup to the procedure done yesterday.

This is a follow-up examination on your patient.

She will follow up with Dr. Can't-Speak-English-But-Thinks-He-Can-Spell tomorrow.

I will, however, note this disclaimer: I was out of the field for a few years, and something may have changed in the AAMT BOS that I haven't noticed yet...
followup vs follow up - sm please
Subject: followup vs follow up - sm please

Is there an easy way/helpful hint to remember the difference between these?
TIA!
follow-up when an adjective.
Subject: follow-up when an adjective.


Followup or follow up
Is knowing the difference between followup and follow up really a huge deal?  I can never get them straight and QA is always nagging about it. 
followup or follow up
Subject: followup or follow up

The rule most places I've seen in followup for a noun and follow up or follow-up for a verb.  Any official rules floating around out there?  I work for 2 different companies and the editors do it different at each.
I don't do psych, so I'd follow what the
Subject: I don't do psych, so I'd follow what the

psych experts say, but in other dictation you would type a ratio like that as 1:1.

follow-up appointment
Subject: follow-up appointment

follow-up is actually an adjective in that example. I was trained to use hyphenated form for adjectives, but it is usually client preference anyway. I will see him in followup, would be the noun form.
help with followup follow up
Subject: help with followup follow up

Found this on another MT board and thought it was EXTREMELY helpful as even as QA I still get confused!


 


I know "follow up" is a verb and "followup" is a noun/adjective but am still having some trouble.  A suggestion is to place a different noun or verb in its place. For example, use eat. He will followup/follow up next week. If you place "eat" in the sentence, "He will eat next week." you know it is a verb because the sentence still makes sense.


followup, follow up
Subject: followup, follow up

I believe it was in Vera Pyle I learned years ago that followup (one word) is a noun, and follow up is an action, a verb. That's how I always remember it.
I know that, but followup or follow-up
Subject: I know that, but followup or follow-up

I'm trying to figure out whether it is "followup" or "follow-up"