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Just another thread for all the saturation talk. But I know you didn't mean for this thread to head in that direction.
Just another thread for all the saturation talk. But I know you didn't mean for this thread to head in that direction.
I got the email update from APhA about limits on APAP. What do you guys think about this?
I got the email update from APhA about limits on APAP. What do you guys think about this?
Everyone has been talking about hepatotoxicity associated with apap and reducing the daily limit from 4 grams to 2.5 grams! Is it official recommendation now or do we still recommend 4 grams or less?
4 gm/day is still the offical line. No reason to go that high though, safer to switch to a different med before you start getting that high.
Huh, odd, in the world I live in, the only acceptable notation for gram is "g".



Huh, odd, in the world I live in, the only acceptable notation for gram is "g".
You would think so, huh? That's that excepted metric unit, I agree. But I constantly see gm used in the pharmacy world, so I have adapted to that notation. What are you going to do, you know? I don't mean once in a while either, it's practically the only way I ever see gram written out. Interestingly it seems to me to be more dangerous that just using g, but who am I to say?
Eidt: Google "gr as gram". Some sites support it's accepted use to mean gram and others forbid it, claiming that it is both inaccurate and dangerous. All I can say is I see it quite often and comes pretty natural to me know.
It's on the list of unaccepted abbreviations at my hospital. It's so easily confused with "mg" that writing it borders on negligence.
gr?? Are you serious? That's the abbreviation for grain, not gram. If you were a shooter, you'd know that. The only thing I can think of is 335 gr bullet and 1 gram is about 15 grains lol. That is a seriously old apothecary unit and most RPhs I work with would fkin' murdalize an intern or resident that used "gr" or "gm" to denote "gram." Ayyyy. I've either never seen "gm" used so far in pharm. school or my mind just automatically replaced it with "g" lol.
Either way... Now it's Passion 5004 : Owle 1.
haha, no not gr, I meant gm. But seriously, I see gm all the time. (not gr, not sure where that even came from - that really was an error, I am familiar with gr as a unit, but have never seen it in practise)
We use gm in pk class, I have seen it in the hospital, on dosing charts/nomograms, dosing guidelines, etc. Can't remember if I used to see it at CVS, so few things are dosed in the gram range there. I thought it was strange at first, but now I roll with it. Maybe it is a bad habit I should review though.
Anyway google "GM as gram" and there are medical websites on both sides of the issue.
Eh, if that's the way things work in your neck of the woods, and it's an accepted practice, (P 5005, O 1), then you should be good to go.
Still so weird to me though! I mean, all through undergraduate it was "g", I don't think I could switch to "gm" if I tried, but when in Rome...

You're
Your funner.
You're
You're doing it wrong bro.
Also, funner is not a word, so you lost all the points you thought you were getting for missing that.
Get on my level.

you're doing it wrong bro.
Also, funner is not a word, so you lost all the points you thought you were getting for missing that.
Get on my level.
You're doing it wrong bro.
Also, funner is not a word, so you lost all the points you thought you were getting for missing that.
Get on my level.

I was hoping someone would fall for it, I knew you never would. That made my day.![]()
I think the levity of my reply to your reply has been destroyed by analyzing it.
You (intentionally) made a mistake with you are, (youre) so I did the same thing in my reply (your) and added one of my own (funner) in the hopes to start a bad grammar chain.
Alas... it petered out and I have been reaffirmed that I should indeed not quit pharmacy in favor of exploring stand up comedy.
You do use gm for gram... Especially doctors do when they prescribe for cream or something! Our chemistry teacher in undergrad might've taken points off, but out there they do use it! I just came across a prescription and first thing i thought was about this thread haha... I took a picture, i'll post it when I get home : - )

Make sure you edit the hell out of that thing
You want to keep as much hidden and a secret as possible.
YUP, I zoomed in so much you just see the gm and refills nothing else lol It's HIPPA-Proof : - )
Really? Immune to HIPPAs? How does that work exactly?


Here how it works... When you can't see the patient name, dob, address, doctor, Pharmacy, date, dx, etc... That's how it's immune to hippa! Need I say more?![]()
Here how it works... When you can't see the patient name, dob, address, doctor, Pharmacy, date, dx, etc... That's how it's immune to hippa! Need I say more?![]()
HIPAA dude. The way I remember is it ends in Affordability Act. Thus the two a's.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
What about the doctor's address and phone number? Those would need to be hidden as well. Because of Google, people can look up a doctor's name at a clinic if they can see a phone number.
You should also hide NPI and DEA numbers.
Did I forget anything?
Accountability actually.
http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/
Were you thinking of "Healthcare Affordability Act" or "Patient Protection and Affordability Act"?
What about the doctor's address and phone number? Those would need to be hidden as well. Because of Google, people can look up a doctor's name at a clinic if they can see a phone number.
You should also hide NPI and DEA numbers.
Did I forget anything?
All you see is 100gm on the rx, nothing else!
All you see is 100gm on the rx, nothing else!
Think twice about posting that pic? Prolly a good idea not to, don't want to get into any trouble, HIPAA or otherwise.
What is dosed 100 grams anyway? I am thinking that almost has to be a mistake, I can't think of anything that is dosed like that. Please educate me. Also follow up with that patient to make sure they are not dead. 😉
That reminds me of a rap song by Trillville![]()
The SI unit of mass is gram, abbreviated "g", not "gm."
I've never seen "gm" on a 'scrip label so I'm not sure what rx you're looking at. Maybe the same bass-ackwards part of the pharmacy world that Owle comes from...
Trillville? Wonder where they got that name...