Bacii — Score

If you are seeing the term "Bacii" on a form or document, it is highly likely a typographical error or phonetic misspelling of BIC.

The "Mention Très Bien" (Very Good). This is the goldilocks zone. Students here are competitive for top-tier institutions like Sciences Po, Grandes Écoles, Ivy League feeder programs, and medical school.

Digital health apps and electronic medical records (EMRs) are beginning to integrate the BACII score into routine vitals. Just as we record blood pressure and heart rate, we may soon record a BACII score for every patient who smokes.

Machine learning algorithms can track BACII scores over time to predict relapse risk. If a patient’s score jumps from 6 to 14 between visits, an automated alert triggers a pharmacist outreach to adjust NRT doses. bacii score

Simply put, the BACII score is the weighted average of your final exam results, usually calculated on a scale of 0 to 100 (or 0 to 20 in many systems, then converted).

However, it is rarely a simple average. The score takes into account:

The magic number is usually 60 out of 100 (or 10/20). That is the passing threshold. But in reality, competitive universities rarely look at a "pass." If you are seeing the term "Bacii" on

Unlike simple blood counts, the BACII Score is a multivariate algorithm. It does not rely on a single number but rather on a ratio of specific biomarkers. The formula is proprietary in some commercial labs, but the core components are:

The simplified formula looks like this:

BACII = (Log10 TBA × Cologne II ratio) / (ALB × 0.5) + (ALPI) The magic number is usually 60 out of 100 (or 10/20)

Scores typically range from 0.0 to 2.5.

If you have calculated your BACII score and found it to be in the severe range (13+), do not panic. Addiction is a chronic condition, but it is treatable. Here is a clinical roadmap to reducing your score.