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Prescription Codes

stealthtrucker

Greenlighter
Joined
Dec 16, 2006
Messages
254
Hey everyone,

I've got a script for dexamphetamine 5mg. I got a repeat filled and on the new repeat copy that I got back with the medicine it said "Dexamphetamine Sulphate 5mg T (QA))"

What does T (QA)) mean?

Thanks
 
if the op has capatilised correctly, you may be right about the Tablet.... if my sister in law the pharmacist wasnt such a judgemental suspicious bitch, I would ask her... :P
 
tab means tablet, cap means capsule, p.o means by mouth orally. Then it usually says q.d, b.i.d, t.d.s, p.r.n, q.(x).h (with x replaced by number of hours)...
 
"Q" means every. "T" in some doctors' writing is the Roman numeral "1". It probably reads "take I tablet every "A" which you should reconsider. The A might actually be a number. That would be standard. "Take one tablet every (so many hours).
 
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i have never seen Q.A but quality assurance is a good guess. It may be there for confusion purposes. Or it may mean (query authority)
 
Thank you for pointing that out. We are not criminals on blue light. So don't mess with your doctors prescription pad, even if you ever feel tempted. Resist. It would not be worth the jail time.
 
From what I know as a pharm tech and the research I have had to do, doctors literally do learn to write in a code. That makes it much harder to fake a script.
 
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