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Reference — Pharmacology

Medication Abbreviations Reference

Medication abbreviations are a known source of misinterpretation errors. This reference covers common accepted abbreviations, the ISMP/TJC Do-Not-Use list, and safety notes for documentation and order verification.

Educational use only. Abbreviation standards vary by institution. Always clarify ambiguous abbreviations with the prescriber rather than guessing. Follow your facility's approved abbreviation list and The Joint Commission requirements. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

ISMP / TJC Do-Not-Use Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are prohibited in medication orders by The Joint Commission and ISMP due to their association with serious errors.

AbbreviationIntended MeaningMisinterpretation RiskUse Instead
U or uUnitsRead as 0 or 4 — 10U becomes 100, causing 10× overdoseWrite “units”
IUInternational unitsMistaken for IV (intravenous) or 10Write “international units”
QD or qdEvery day (once daily)Mistaken for QID (four times daily)Write “daily”
QOD or qodEvery other dayMistaken for QD (daily) or QIDWrite “every other day”
Trailing zero (1.0 mg)1 mgDecimal missed → read as 10 mg (10× overdose)Write “1 mg” (no trailing zero)
Naked decimal (.5 mg)0.5 mgDecimal missed → read as 5 mg (10× overdose)Write “0.5 mg” (leading zero)
MS or MSO₄Morphine sulfateConfused with magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄)Write “morphine sulfate”
MgSO₄Magnesium sulfateConfused with morphine sulfate (MS)Write “magnesium sulfate”

Common Accepted Frequency Abbreviations

AbbreviationMeaningNote
BIDTwice dailyEvery 12 hours; confirm specific times with facility policy
TIDThree times dailyEvery 8 hours
QIDFour times dailyEvery 6 hours
PRNAs neededDocument reason and response for every PRN dose
Q4HEvery 4 hours
Q6HEvery 6 hours
Q8HEvery 8 hours
Q12HEvery 12 hours
ACBefore mealsTiming relative to meals; insulin is often ordered AC
PCAfter meals
HSAt bedtimeSome facilities prohibit HS — may be confused with “half-strength”
STATImmediatelyGive within minutes of receipt; highest priority
NOWGive immediately, one timeLess urgent than STAT in some systems

Common Route Abbreviations

AbbreviationMeaning
POBy mouth (oral)
SLSublingual (under the tongue)
IVIntravenous
IVP or IV PushIntravenous push (bolus)
IVPBIntravenous piggyback (secondary infusion)
IMIntramuscular
SQ or SubQSubcutaneous
TOPTopical
ODRight eye (oculus dexter)
OSLeft eye (oculus sinister)
OUBoth eyes (oculus uterque)
PRPer rectum (rectal)
NG or NGTNasogastric tube
PEGPercutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube

Note: OD, OS, OU are on the ISMP's List of Error-Prone Abbreviations — many facilities require writing out “right eye,” “left eye,” or “both eyes.” Verify your facility's policy.

Related References

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) · FDA prescribing information · The Joint Commission — National Patient Safety Goals. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →