This is Why Many Doctors Have Sloppy Handwriting

Although electronic records are more common now, if you saw your doctor's handwriting, there's a good chance it's chicken scratch. Here's why.

If youโ€™ve ever taken a handwritten prescription from a doctor or looked at the notes from your visit, it seems like no amount of squinting could help the letters get clearer. Bad handwriting almost seems like a requirement for graduating from med school. Although most doctors use electronic medical records today, you might still come across handwriting from your doctorโ€”and have trouble deciphering it.

Itโ€™s not like only people with bad handwriting are attracted to the medical field. Ruth Brocato, MD, primary care doctor with Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore, Maryland says she went from winning a penmanship award in grade school to having a totally illegible script now. โ€œI know other people have trouble deciphering my notes,โ€ says Dr. Brocato, who adds that she can usually read her own writing.

Doctors take lots of notes

For one thing, doctors have to write more than just about any other job. โ€œIn the medical field, if itโ€™s not documented, it didnโ€™t happen,โ€ says Celine Thum, MD, medical director at ParaDocs Worldwide. Anything you talk about behind closed doors needs written evidence for your medical history.

Long days plus tons of writing equals a very tired hand. โ€œIf youโ€™re writing literally for 10ย to 12ย hours a day and youโ€™re handwriting, your hand just canโ€™t do it,โ€ says Dr. Brocato. Most doctorsโ€™ handwriting gets worse over the course of the day as those small hand muscles get overworked, says Asher Goldstein, MD, pain management doctor with Genesis Pain Centers in the tri-state area. Communication between doctors is important, too. (And there’s a reason why some hospitals and doctors still use pagers.)

Rushing takes a toll

If doctors could spend an hour with every patient, they might be able to slow down and give their hands a rest. But the fact is, most physicians are rushing around to the next patient. For instance, one patient might have just 15 minutes to discuss eight medical issues and ask important questions about prescriptions, says Dr. Brocato. With so many patients to see in a limited time, doctors are more concerned with getting the information down than perfecting their handwriting.

The jargon that doctors deal with also lends itself to bad handwriting. Case in point: imagine trying to write โ€œepididymitisโ€ without your computerโ€™s handy spellcheck. โ€œWe have so many technical terms that are impossible to write,โ€ says Dr. Thum. โ€œYou sometimes scribble to cover the error.โ€

Plus, some terms that are totally clear to medical experts might leave you scratching your head. For instance, QD is shorthand for a Latin phrase meaning โ€œone a dayโ€ and TID means โ€œthree times a day.โ€ Your pharmacist would know exactly what your doctor meant, but youโ€™d probably just write it off as chicken scratch.

Clarity where it matters

Dr. Brocato, who now mostly types, says doctors are extra careful when it comes to prescriptions in which a tiny misread could have major consequences. For instance, instead of writing โ€œmgโ€ or โ€œmcg,โ€ doctors were encouraged to write out โ€œmilligramโ€ or โ€œmicrogram.โ€ โ€œIf [a dosage] is 100 times what youโ€™re writing, you have to be super careful about that,โ€ she says.

Those tiny nuances in handwriting do make a difference. A 2017 study found that just 82 percent of nurses and only 75 percent of pharmacists could read doctor’s instructions from the sample group.

Poor handwriting is less of an issue today

Now, many doctors are moving toward electronic medical records to cut down on lost-in-translation errors, even for prescriptions. Some states even legally require doctors to send in prescriptions electronically instead of passing over handwritten slips. Doctors agree thereโ€™s now less chance for error. โ€œThings are much more legible than they have been in the past,โ€ says Dr. Goldstein.

Of course, typing everything isnโ€™t perfect either. Thereโ€™s still the possibility of entering, say, 30 instead of 300, and the process is slower than just scrawling out a prescription. (Now, learn about these secrets hospitals don’t want to tell youโ€”but every patient should know.)

Sources

Marissa Laliberte
Marissa Laliberte-Simonian is a London-based associate editor with the global promotions team at WebMDโ€™s Medscape.com and was previously a staff writer for Reader's Digest. Her work has also appeared in Business Insider, Parents magazine, CreakyJoints, and the Baltimore Sun. You can find her on Instagram @marissasimonian.