The Lancet: Volume 352, Issue 9139, 7 November 1998, Pages 1539–1543
Text entries in medical records must be succinct, but must also avoid ambiguity. The note, “Pain in left
knee—not sitting” may be concise and clear to the writer, but to other readers it could mean that the pain
disappears when the patient sits or that, because of pain, the patient is not sitting. If, while entering data, writers
anticipate the needs of readers, there can be benefits in speed and accuracy for future users, including the
original writer.
Ambiguities can also arise with quantifiers such as “sometimes” or “often”, because these convey different
meanings to patients and clinicians, with patients tending to attribute higher frequencies.
Ambiguity is lessened if frequency is explicitly specified—for example, as “once a month”.
Similarly, use of illdefined words (eg, large, likely) to quantify size or probability, is best avoided. The different >interpretation by doctors of alternative, equivalent measures of drug efficacy, such as absolute and relative difference,
is a further warning that words matter.
How to limit clinical errors in interpretation of data [PDF]
Patricia Wright, Carel Jansen, Jeremy C. Wyatt
The Lancet: Volume 352, Issue 9139, 7 November 1998, Pages 1539–1543