Index Medicus -national Library Of Medicine- Abbreviations For Journal Titles May 2026
That evening, Eleanor stayed late. She pulled a stack of 500 index cards from the catalog and began a radical experiment. She took the most frequent words in medical journal titles: Acta , Annales , Archives , Journal , Medical , Research , Surgery . Then she invented a shorthand. “Acta” became Acta (no change—it was short enough). “Annales” became Ann. “Archives” became Arch. “Journal” became J. “Medical” became Med. “Surgery” became Surg. By midnight, she had a list of forty abbreviations.
The NLM knew they had a tiger by the tail. In 1963, with the advent of computerized indexing (the precursor to MEDLINE), they formalized the system into what became known as the . Every abbreviation had to be unique, reversible (you could reconstruct the original title from the abbreviation, mostly), and language-agnostic. English, French, German—all were flattened into a common, Roman-alphabet code. That evening, Eleanor stayed late
He convened a committee: three catalogers, a medical historian from Johns Hopkins, and a frustrated cardiologist who actually used the Index Medicus every day. For six months, they argued over every slash and period. Could “New England Journal of Medicine” become N Engl J Med ? (Yes, but only if “New” was not abbreviated to N. alone—too vague.) What about “Journal of the American Medical Association” ? That became JAMA —but was that an abbreviation or a new word? (They decided it was a “title word contraction.”) And the German monster? Z Exp Med. Everyone held their breath. It fit on one line. Then she invented a shorthand