I think the hyphens and wording are fine. nm
Posted By: JMHO on 2007-10-02
In Reply to: Not sure how to write this - carla
Subject: I think the hyphens and wording are fine. nm
s
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40-some-odd stitches is fine. Leave as dictated, but you need hyphens.
Subject: 40-some-odd stitches is fine. Leave as dictated, but you need hyphens.
wording
Subject: wording
Could someone straighten this sentence out any better? This is what he is saying:
She has diffuse pain on both the medial aspect of the ankle. Do you think he is foregetting to say and lateral after the word medial? How do I make this look better?
Thanks!
I think the wording for the first s/l is okay. sm
Subject: I think the wording for the first s/l is okay. sm
Agree with Txczech re "branch." You can always flag it to cover yourself.
Another wording you see is
Subject: Another wording you see is
"injection into the facet joint," so I would say it would be intrafacet injection.
JMO though.
I think he just tripped over his wording
Subject: I think he just tripped over his wording
Probably just meant carotid ultrasound.
Help with singular/pleural wording please.. sm
Subject: Help with singular/pleural wording please.. sm
Which is correct? "There is a cerumen impaction bilaterally which is removed." OR "There are cerumen impactions bilaterally which are removed." TIA
If you changed the wording to what you thought was correct, sm
it would imply that the colostomy bag was bleeding, not blood coming from the colostomy.
I would think it is just the dr's wording. They make up words. If it is not verbatim I would pu
Subject: I would think it is just the dr's wording. They make up words. If it is not verbatim I would put cardiology eval, but if verbatim, leave his word if u are 100% that is what he is saying. nm
d
Skin graft, correct wording?
Subject: Skin graft, correct wording?
New to this type of procedure - split thickness skin graft. Dictator states "one twelve thousandths of an inch". What is the correct way to type this?
Thanks.
even with verbatim, we can change wording if incorrect grammar...YW:)..nm
Subject: even with verbatim, we can change wording if incorrect grammar...YW:)..nm
x
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
And, when I first started out so many years ago our motto was "when in doubt hyphenate" and it was so long ago it had to be incorrect.
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
My QA only allows 3- to 4-mm effusion. So I don't know what to tell her.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
I am a QA specialist and I am starting to see a trend away from hyphenating African-American male/female, etc. Does anyone know if there is a new official rule for this that can be referenced? Just what we need, another change.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
We were told not to use hyphens with African-American, Latin-American, etc. any longer.
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
African-American, 32-year-old, bright-red-blood, any hard and fast rules on these?
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
Thanks:)
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
It's a simple rule of English concerning compound adjectives. From The New St. Martin's Handbook (of English usage), "Often you will use adjectives made up of word combinations that are not listed in the dictationary. The guiding principle then is to hyphenate most compound adjectives that precede a noun but not those that follow a noun." Thus "5-French catheter" but "upsized to 5 French."
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
"Non-ill" is not a word. No hyphens necessary here. Change to: Not ill appearing.
Lilly
Don't know the med, but no hyphens in every other day. nm
Subject: Don't know the med, but no hyphens in every other day. nm
s
no hyphens
Subject: no hyphens
That is funny because I was taught this by someone that had 15 years experience. I guess we learn all different ways to do things. Thanks for the word help.
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
post-arthroscopic surgery or post-arthroscopic-surgery? TIA?
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
The patient is 12 days post-arthroscopic surgery or the patient is 12 days post-arthroscopic-surgery. Thanks again!
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
Thanks, but I thought "post" in the medical realm is a prefix and should be attached with a hyphen I guess.
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
Thank. This helps a lot :)
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
This is great! What is it from?
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
In regards to "hyphens" below, it states words with prefixes such as non, mid, et cetera, do not need a hyphen. Is it still acceptable if my spellchecker redlines the word? For example: midarch or noncontact. These are terms that come up often for me. TIA.
no hyphens necessary...nm
Subject: no hyphens necessary...nm
x
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
I agree with Michelle. The rule is that any time there are two adjectives describing a noun or three adjectives describing the noun. Example: She was a super-terrific transcription. LOL.
hyphens........sm
Subject: hyphens........sm
I would type it like that:
The patient is a 40-week, appropriate for gestational- age female.
hyphens... sm
Subject: hyphens... sm
I am not completely sure if my version is right, but I am definitely sure that mine is better than that of RockinMT, that looks really weird, 4 hyphens in a row? That can't be right.
And I think that this comment
comes from Cyndiee, or whatever her name is.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
Hey all, I just wanted to check on this in the notes that I am editing right now.
I know that "53-year-old" is hyphenated, but is "53 years old."
I am fairly certain that is isn't, but I want to be sure before I correct the note.
Thanks for any help that is offered. I'm still in school so I haven't learned enough yet. :)
hyphens - none
Subject: hyphens - none
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
thanks!
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
Does anyone know of a good place/website to look up hyphenated words .. I get so confused as to when to put a hyphen in or not. I know when it is two adjectives together describing a noun a hyphen goes in but sometimes it's hard to tell .. like in the sentence ... Adjacent soft-tissue swelling is seen and diagnosis of left-deep neck abscess.
No hyphens.
Subject: No hyphens.
x
There would be no hyphens in that example.
Subject: There would be no hyphens in that example.
x
1 g b.i.d. - no hyphens.
Subject: 1 g b.i.d. - no hyphens.
x
hyphens
Subject: hyphens
I would do -
...is well organized
steroid-dependent asthma (hyphenated because it is compound modifier in this case)
white matter infarcts
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_hyphen.html
Maybe this will help. I hate them too.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
A 12-year old or a 12-year-old boy.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
A 12-year old, a 12-year-old boy or the boy is 12 years old.
no hyphens
Subject: no hyphens
nm
would there be hyphens...
Subject: would there be hyphens...
for well lined up patella. tia.
Radiographs show a well lined up patella.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
Would you hyphenate antiosteoporosis? I didn't, but now I'm not sure. Thanks.
Hyphens
Subject: Hyphens
Thank you.
I have never seen it with hyphens.
Subject: I have never seen it with hyphens.
I would do it as you did in your examples. I like hyphens! nm
Subject: I would do it as you did in your examples. I like hyphens! nm
s
hyphens before noun and not after...sm
Subject: hyphens before noun and not after...sm
I think, "A chip-in-the-tip camera was used..." is correct, but I would type "A camera with a chip in the tip was used...." if dictated that way...so it depends on how they say it...hope that helps.
This is how I learned hyphens sm
Subject: This is how I learned hyphens sm
VI. Hyphenation These prefixes do not require the use of a connecting hyphen in compound terms:
ante |
intra |
semi |
anti |
micro |
sub |
bi |
mid |
super |
co |
non |
supra |
contra |
over |
trans |
counter |
pre |
tri |
de |
post |
ultra |
extra |
pro |
un |
infra |
pseudo |
under |
inter |
re |
weight |
Examples - antecubital not ante-cubitalAlso Correct - antithesis, bitemporal, counterproductive, defibrillated, extrapyramidal, infraumbilical, interpersonal, intracranial, microhematuria, midline, nontender, nondistended, nonfocal, nonspecific, noncontributory, noncompliance, nonicteric, nonsmall, overestimate, overweight, preoperative, postoperative, posttraumatic, pseudogout, semicircular, sublingual, superimposed, supramammary, transvaginal, ultraviolet, underweight, weightbearing.
Do use a hyphen with prefixes ending in a or i and a base word beginning with the same letter. Example - anti-inflammatory. Do use a hyphen when compounded with the prefix self. Example - self-administered, self-monitored. For Clarification - Use a hyphen after a prefix if not using a hyphen would change the meaning of the word. Examples - re-cover (to cover again) versus recover (regain)
Post is in that list above so I make it part of the word in most cases unless it should just be a stand-alone word.
Omit the hyphens!
Subject: Omit the hyphens!
x
Your hyphens are correct.
Subject: Your hyphens are correct.
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