• @SkyezOpen
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    1764 months ago

    Decided to test a former pharm tech.

    • @[email protected]
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      914 months ago

      The runes… decoded

      Thanks for sending and sharing, that’s incredible to the point it’s hard to believe

      • @[email protected]
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        504 months ago

        i guess the p and l are the important bits and the rest can just be inferred, since paracetamol is very commonly used and they’d get tired writing it in detail every time. other more specialized drugs with p___l (or close to it) as its name would have more squiggles i assume.

        • @[email protected]
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          194 months ago

          It’s (shorthand)[teeline.online]. It says “prc(t)ml” with the p being in the obvious spot (though it should be just a downward line), the r is the diagonal line after it, the c is the little curl, the t should be more pronounced, but it should be a horizontal line slightly above the rest, the m is a concave-down swoosh, and the l is the final curl. No vowels b/c they’re largely redundant.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        It’s a super common prescription and most doctors probably couldn’t spell it offhand. Combined with dosing info it would be more obvious. Also if they do happen to be wrong it’s unlikely to actually cause harm with acetaminophen/paracetamol.

        Edit: another benefit is disguising to a patient that demands something to take. Essentially a placebo.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 months ago

          In addition, there’s a psychological phenomenon where our brains only need the first and last letter of a word in the right place, and all the right letters in between in any order, to suss out a word. Our familiarity with a lngaauge will put it together, so presumably the same is true for healthcare providers’ common words.

          Note: I included an example of this in my comment

          • @danc4498
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            94 months ago

            In adtidion, trehe’s a pshyocloigal pheonmneon where our bairns olny need the fsrit and lsat lteter of a word in the rghit pclae, and all the rghit ltertes in bteewen in any oedrr, to suss out a word. Our faiilamirty with a lagnuage wlil put it toehgter, so pseurambly the smae is treu for haehtlcare pvoerdirs’ cmmoon wdros.

            FTFY… I read this just as fast as the original.

          • @thelasttoot
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            4 months ago

            Your e-----------e d-----t w----k w-----------t the c-----------t of the l---------s i-----------------n.

            If they’re commonly used words the scribbles end up becoming a form of shorthand that doctors can recognize, but they’re meaningless to anyone who isn’t already familiar with them.

            • @[email protected]
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              4 months ago

              “Your example doesn’t work without the context of the (something) intention.”

              How’d I do?

              • @thelasttoot
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                44 months ago

                Pretty damn close.

                “Your example doesn’t work without the context of the letters inbetween.”

                  • @thelasttoot
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                    44 months ago

                    Because scribbles all have correct grammar and spelling, right?

                  • Zoot
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                    34 months ago

                    An yet its common enough that people are able to figure out what is meant.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 months ago

            I love that effect, but sometimes it can fail. For example:

            Our familiarity with lineage will…

            Is how my stupid ass brain read it first and I knew what was up

          • @[email protected]
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            24 months ago

            Not sure but I think you mean chunking. When you know a word you don’t need to read all letters by themselves but know roughly what the word looks like as a whole, so you can read it faster. This also inrotrozutes a failure rate of course, but works pretty well.