Nursing

Drug Abbreviations and Medication Orders

Last updated: March 2026 · Beginner

Educational Use Only

This content is for educational purposes only and does not substitute for clinical training, institutional protocols, or professional medical guidance. Always verify calculations with your facility's protocols and a licensed pharmacist before administering medications to patients.

Before you start

You should be comfortable with:

Real-world applications
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Nursing

Medication dosages, IV drip rates, vital monitoring

Every medication order contains a compact set of abbreviations that tell you exactly what to give, how much, by what route, and how often. Before you can perform any dosage calculation, you need to decode these abbreviations accurately. A misread abbreviation can mean the difference between giving a medication four times a day and giving it at bedtime — a potentially dangerous mistake.

These abbreviations, often called sig codes (from the Latin signa, meaning “label”), are the shared shorthand of prescribers, pharmacists, and nurses. While electronic health records have reduced handwriting errors, you will still encounter these abbreviations on medication labels, pharmacy printouts, reference charts, and in clinical conversation.

Common Drug Abbreviations

The abbreviations below appear on virtually every medication order. Memorizing them is non-negotiable for clinical practice.

Routes of Administration

AbbreviationMeaningDescription
POPer os (by mouth)Oral administration — tablets, capsules, liquids
IVIntravenousDirectly into a vein
IMIntramuscularInto a muscle (deltoid, vastus lateralis, gluteus)
SubQ (or SC)SubcutaneousUnder the skin (insulin, heparin, enoxaparin)
SLSublingualUnder the tongue (nitroglycerin)
PRPer rectumRectal administration (suppositories)
GTGastrostomy tubeVia a feeding tube
INHInhalationBreathed in (nebulizers, inhalers)
TOPTopicalApplied to the skin surface

Frequency Abbreviations

AbbreviationMeaningHow Often
daily (or q.day)Once dailyEvery 24 hours
BIDBis in dieTwice a day
TIDTer in dieThree times a day
QIDQuater in dieFour times a day
q4hEvery 4 hours6 times per 24-hour period
q6hEvery 6 hours4 times per 24-hour period
q8hEvery 8 hours3 times per 24-hour period
q12hEvery 12 hours2 times per 24-hour period
PRNPro re nataAs needed (requires a clinical indication)
STATStatimImmediately — give now, once
acAnte cibumBefore meals
pcPost cibumAfter meals
hsHora somniAt bedtime

Other Common Abbreviations

AbbreviationMeaning
tabTablet
capCapsule
suspSuspension
solnSolution
suppSuppository
gttDrop(s)
mLMilliliter
mgMilligram
mcgMicrogram
mEqMilliequivalent
NKANo known allergies
NPONothing by mouth

Dangerous Abbreviations — The ISMP “Do Not Use” List

The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) and The Joint Commission have identified abbreviations that cause frequent medication errors. These abbreviations should never be used in medication orders, but you may still encounter them on older documents or in informal communication. Knowing them helps you catch errors.

Dangerous AbbreviationIntended MeaningWhy It Is DangerousUse Instead
UUnitsMistaken for a zero (0) — a 10-fold overdoseWrite “units”
IUInternational unitsMistaken for “IV” (intravenous)Write “international units”
QDEvery dayMistaken for QID (four times daily)Write “daily”
QODEvery other dayMistaken for QD (daily) or QIDWrite “every other day”
Trailing zero (e.g., 5.0 mg)5 mgDecimal point missed → read as 50 mgWrite “5 mg” (no trailing zero)
No leading zero (e.g., .5 mg)0.5 mgDecimal point missed → read as 5 mgWrite “0.5 mg” (always use leading zero)
MS, MSO4, MgSO4Morphine sulfate or magnesium sulfateConfused for each other — very different drugsWrite full drug name
μgMicrogramMistaken for mg (1,000-fold error)Write “mcg”

The trailing zero and missing leading zero errors are especially critical because they cause 10-fold dosing errors, which are among the most common and most dangerous medication mistakes.

Parts of a Medication Order

Every complete medication order — whether handwritten, printed, or entered electronically — must contain seven required elements:

ComponentPurposeExample
Patient’s nameIdentifies the correct patientSmith, Jane (DOB 04/15/1980)
Date and timeWhen the order was written03/30/2026 at 0800
Drug nameWhich medication (generic preferred)Metoprolol tartrate
DoseHow much to give50 mg
RouteHow to administerPO
FrequencyHow oftenBID
Prescriber signatureWho authorized the orderDr. J. Rivera, MD

If any of these elements is missing or unclear, the order is incomplete and must be clarified before you administer the medication. Never assume or guess.

Interpreting a Complete Medication Order

When you read a medication order, work through it systematically by identifying each component.

Example 1: Basic Oral Medication

Order: Lisinopril 10 mg PO daily

ComponentValue
Drug nameLisinopril
Dose10 mg
RoutePO (by mouth)
FrequencyDaily (once every 24 hours)
Math-relevant infoYou need 10 mg per dose, 10 mg per day total

If the pharmacy supplies Lisinopril as 5 mg tablets, you calculate:

10 mg (ordered)5 mg (per tablet)=2 tablets per dose\frac{10 \text{ mg (ordered)}}{5 \text{ mg (per tablet)}} = 2 \text{ tablets per dose}

Example 2: PRN Pain Medication

Order: Acetaminophen 650 mg PO q4-6h PRN mild pain

ComponentValue
Drug nameAcetaminophen
Dose650 mg
RoutePO
FrequencyEvery 4 to 6 hours as needed
IndicationMild pain (clinical trigger for PRN)
Math-relevant infoMaximum doses per day: if given every 4 hours, that is 244=6\frac{24}{4} = 6 doses, so the daily maximum is 650×6=3,900650 \times 6 = 3{,}900 mg

Since the maximum safe daily dose of acetaminophen is typically 4,000 mg for adults, this order is within safe limits even at the most frequent interval.

Example 3: IV Medication With a Rate

Order: Vancomycin 1 g IV q12h, infuse over 60 min

ComponentValue
Drug nameVancomycin
Dose1 g (= 1,000 mg)
RouteIV (intravenous)
FrequencyEvery 12 hours
Administration detailInfuse over 60 minutes
Math-relevant infoYou need to set up an infusion to deliver the dose over 60 minutes — this connects to IV drip rate calculations

Electronic vs. Handwritten Orders

Most hospitals now use Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE) systems. Electronic orders reduce ambiguity because they use drop-down menus for drug name, dose, route, and frequency — eliminating handwriting legibility issues. The system may also flag interactions, allergies, and out-of-range doses automatically.

However, handwritten orders still occur in some settings (outpatient clinics, long-term care, emergency situations). When reading a handwritten order:

  • If you cannot read even one character, clarify with the prescriber — never guess
  • Watch for the dangerous abbreviations listed above
  • Verify decimal placement carefully: is that “1.0 mg” or “10 mg”?
  • Check that the route makes sense for the drug form

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Confusing QID and q4h. QID means four times daily at evenly spaced intervals during waking hours (e.g., 0800, 1200, 1600, 2000). It is not the same as “with meals and at bedtime” — that schedule is designated by the abbreviation ACHS (ante cibum hora somni). The abbreviation q4h means every 4 hours around the clock — that is 6 doses per day, not 4.

  2. Misreading a trailing zero. An order written as “Warfarin 5.0 mg” could be misread as 50 mg — a massive overdose. If you see a trailing zero, recognize it as a red flag and confirm the intended dose.

  3. Confusing “ac” and “pc.” The abbreviation ac (before meals) and pc (after meals) look similar. Giving a drug at the wrong time relative to food can affect absorption.

  4. Ignoring the route. Some drugs exist in both PO and IV forms at different concentrations. Metoprolol, for instance, has a typical PO dose of 25 to 100 mg but an IV dose of only 5 mg. Reading the wrong route could lead to a dangerous dose.

  5. Treating BID and q12h as identical. While both mean twice daily, BID typically means during waking hours (e.g., 0800 and 2000), while q12h means strictly every 12 hours. For some medications this timing distinction matters for therapeutic drug levels.

Practice Problems

Test your understanding by interpreting these medication orders. Click to reveal each answer.

Problem 1: Interpret this order: “Amoxicillin 500 mg PO TID ac.” How many mg will the patient receive in 24 hours?

Breaking down the order:

  • Drug: Amoxicillin
  • Dose: 500 mg
  • Route: PO (by mouth)
  • Frequency: TID (three times a day)
  • Timing: ac (before meals)

Total daily dose:

500 mg×3=1,500 mg per day500 \text{ mg} \times 3 = 1{,}500 \text{ mg per day}

Answer: The patient receives 1,500 mg (or 1.5 g) of Amoxicillin per day, taken before each of three meals.

Problem 2: An order reads “Heparin 5,000 units SubQ q12h.” The pharmacy supplies Heparin 10,000 units/mL vials. How many mL do you draw up per dose?

Breaking down the order:

  • Drug: Heparin
  • Dose: 5,000 units
  • Route: SubQ (subcutaneous)
  • Frequency: q12h (every 12 hours)

The supply on hand is 10,000 units per mL.

5,000 units10,000 units/mL=0.5 mL\frac{5{,}000 \text{ units}}{10{,}000 \text{ units/mL}} = 0.5 \text{ mL}

Answer: Draw up 0.5 mL per dose.

Problem 3: An order reads “Furosemide 40 mg IV STAT.” What does STAT mean, and how does it affect your timing?

Breaking down the order:

  • Drug: Furosemide
  • Dose: 40 mg
  • Route: IV (intravenous)
  • Frequency: STAT (immediately — one-time dose)

Answer: STAT means the medication should be given immediately — this is a one-time, urgent dose. You should prepare and administer 40 mg of Furosemide IV as quickly as safely possible. There is no ongoing schedule.

Problem 4: A nurse reads a handwritten order that appears to say “Morphine .5 mg IV q4h PRN pain.” What safety concern should the nurse raise?

The order writes “.5 mg” without a leading zero. According to the ISMP Do Not Use list, a missing leading zero is dangerous because the decimal point could be missed, causing the dose to be read as 5 mg instead of 0.5 mg — a 10-fold overdose.

Answer: The nurse should clarify the order with the prescriber and request it be rewritten as “Morphine 0.5 mg IV q4h PRN pain” with the leading zero included. Morphine is a high-alert medication, making this verification even more critical.

Problem 5: An order reads “Metformin 1,000 mg PO BID pc.” The pharmacy supplies 500 mg tablets. How many tablets per dose, and when should the patient take them?

Breaking down the order:

  • Drug: Metformin
  • Dose: 1,000 mg
  • Route: PO
  • Frequency: BID (twice daily)
  • Timing: pc (after meals)

Tablets per dose:

1,000 mg500 mg/tablet=2 tablets\frac{1{,}000 \text{ mg}}{500 \text{ mg/tablet}} = 2 \text{ tablets}

Answer: Give 2 tablets per dose, after meals, twice daily. Total daily dose is 2,000 mg (4 tablets per day).

Key Takeaways

  • Medication orders have seven required components: patient’s name, date/time, drug name, dose, route, frequency, and prescriber signature — if any are missing, clarify before administering
  • Memorize the standard route abbreviations (PO, IV, IM, SubQ, SL, PR) and frequency abbreviations (BID, TID, QID, q4h, q6h, PRN, STAT, ac, pc, hs)
  • Never use or accept dangerous abbreviations: U for units, trailing zeros, missing leading zeros, QD, QOD, or ambiguous drug name abbreviations
  • Interpreting the order correctly is the first step in every dosage calculation — extract the ordered dose, route, and frequency before calculating
  • When in doubt, always clarify with the prescriber rather than guessing

Return to Math for Nurses for more topics.

Last updated: March 29, 2026