BMJ 1994;309:683-684 (17 September)

Editorials

Acronymophilia

The exponential growth of the use of acronyms should be resisted

Eponyms such as Barlow, Carvallo, Master, and Wolff- Parkinson-White were until recently part of the sport of ward rounds. Times have changed. Now acronyms are in fashion. GUSTO, GISSI, ISIS, MRFIT, and TIMI are heard in hospital corridors and convention halls everywhere.

In cardiology acronyms for research trials have grown almost exponentially. In 1992 I compiled a list of acronyms of 244 major cardiological trials.1 An updated version two years later saw the total nearly quadrupled to over 900.2 As acronyms continue to be born almost every day they need to be made easily understandable by, and readily accessible to, clinicians, investigators, and editors of medical journals while their currency is at a peak.

Acronyms are useful because they simplify, facilitate, and accelerate communication. They have become the shorthand of medicine. Physicians, especially cardiologists, like to use or invent . . . [Full text of this article]


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Relevant Article

Acronymophilia: Abbreviations and acronyms are different
J Wafula, S J Krikler, and P Nicol
BMJ 1994 309: 1021. [Extract] [Full Text]

This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Cheng, T. O. (2002). Every Acronym Should Be Defined When It First Appears in a Publication. Circulation 106 : e134-e134 [Full text]  
  • Cheng, T. O. (2001). RENAISSANCE, RECOVER, and RENEWAL: The 3 Rs. Circulation 104 : e108-e108 [Full text]  
  • Isaacs, D., Fitzgerald, D. (2000). Acronymophilia: an update. Arch. Dis. Child. 83: 517-518 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Cheng, T. O. (1999). Unexplained Acronyms. Circulation 99 : 1922-1926 [Full text]  
  • Wafula, J, Krikler, S J, Nicol, P (1994). Acronymophilia: Abbreviations and acronyms are different. BMJ 309: 1021b-1021 [Full text]  



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