- Joined
- Feb 21, 2002
- Messages
- 4,432
- Reaction score
- 4,815
Friday at work, I had a script for the following:
Rx: Danish Ointment
Signa:
Misce et fiant unguentum secundum artem regulas.
This is on labor day weekend, so we took us hours to decipher this. Come Tuesday I'm certainly going to complain. By the way, for those of you who don't work in community pharmacy, don't panic. Only the really old codgers in dermatology still write is pseudo-Latin. Everyone else uses plain, standard English.
Translation:
Rx. Danish Ointment
Sig: Mix and make a ointment according to the rules of our art.
So we figure out what we had to compound from a Remington's and received the ingredients today. My pharmacist then proceeds to add all the ingredients to a ziplock bag, mash it up, and cut a piece out so it can be used like a icing tube. It's a unique way to compound an ointment. Know of any other interesting tricks?
Rx: Danish Ointment
Signa:
Misce et fiant unguentum secundum artem regulas.
This is on labor day weekend, so we took us hours to decipher this. Come Tuesday I'm certainly going to complain. By the way, for those of you who don't work in community pharmacy, don't panic. Only the really old codgers in dermatology still write is pseudo-Latin. Everyone else uses plain, standard English.
Translation:
Rx. Danish Ointment
Sig: Mix and make a ointment according to the rules of our art.
So we figure out what we had to compound from a Remington's and received the ingredients today. My pharmacist then proceeds to add all the ingredients to a ziplock bag, mash it up, and cut a piece out so it can be used like a icing tube. It's a unique way to compound an ointment. Know of any other interesting tricks?