What does Beating off Angels mean?
Beating off Angels means doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it
This acronym/slang usually belongs to Medical & Science category.
What is the abbreviation for doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it?
doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it can be abbreviated as Beating off Angels
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Most popular questions people look for before coming to this page
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What does Beating off Angels stand for? Beating off Angels stands for "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it". |
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How to abbreviate "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it"? "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it" can be abbreviated as Beating off Angels. |
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What is the meaning of Beating off Angels abbreviation? The meaning of Beating off Angels abbreviation is "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it". |
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What is Beating off Angels abbreviation? One of the definitions of Beating off Angels is "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it". |
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What does Beating off Angels mean? Beating off Angels as abbreviation means "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it". |
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What is shorthand of doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it? The most common shorthand of "doing CPR in vain on a patient who won't make it" is Beating off Angels. |
Abbreviations or Slang with similar meaning
- GSP - Gown Sign Positive - A Patient Who Leaves (self-discharge) Without Official Discharge Orders
- NETMA - Nobody Ever Tells Me Anything (generally A Doctor's Gripe On A Patient's Chart)
- conductor's ticket. - On a cruise ship, a free ticket awarded based on the size of a group booking. The ticket can be used by the travel agent who put the group together or given to a person in the group who was instrument
- O&D traffic. - Origin and destination traffic. The passengers on a flight who are either boarding or deplaning at a particular stop, as distinct from those remaining on the plane to go to another destination.
- transient. - Any person who is not a permanent resident. In some hotels, a guest who is not renting by the month.
- walk-in. - In a hotel, a guest who arrives without a reservation. In a travel agency, a customer who arrives unannounced, especially a new customer.
- ASBO - Anti-Social Behaviour Order. A controversial UK crime prevention mechanism in the form of a civil restriction issued by a magistrate's court, placed on a person who is deemed to have committed a public nuisance offence, which for example instructs the per
- AWTB/AWTF - Away With The Birds/Away With The Fairies; a patient who is totally confused
- Bungee jumper - a patient who pulls on his catheter tube
- Eternal Care - Intensive Care (for a patient who won't come out again)
- Gown's Sign, positive - a patient who leaves (self-discharge ) without official discharge orders
- Horrendoplasty - A god-awful surgery with a probable poor outcome e.g. difficult operation for 12 hours on a patient with a BMI of 45
- Janitor's fracture - a fracture so obvious that a janitor (cleaner) could diagnose it
- Lerner/Bernstein Fracture - the injury suffered by a patient who is intent on suing someone over his trip or fall (Lerner/Bernstein are ambulance-chasing lawyers in one region).
- n=1 trial - polite term for experimenting on a patient
- PSLM - (Por Si Las Moscas - because of the flies) (South America) - try some medications just in case (on a no-hope case)
- Squirrel - eccentric or hypochodriac ("squirrelly") patient who can make life difficult. Found in the phrase "squirrels get sick too" to remind staff that even eccentric patients may have a real medical problem
- Two Dudes - a patient who was in a fight "Two dudes jumped me for no reason" (implying the patient would have one against one assailant)
- Viaggravation - what a doctor gets from a patient who is demanding erectile dysfunction medication on the NHS (not all areas of the UK provide this on NHS)
- Wilkinson's Syndrome - a patient who has slashed their wrists with a razor blade (after a popular brand of razor)