7 Reading Pre
7 Reading Pre
7 Reading Pre
A process.
When I learn forward, the pain goes away.
The pain starts in my chest and moves up to my shoulder.
MEDICAL ENGLISH – PRONUNCIATION
MEDICAL ENGLISH – PRONUNCIATION
READING : HUMAN BODY
Head
Inside the head is the brain, which is responsible for thinking. The top of
a person's scalp is covered with hair. Beneath the hairline at the front of
the face is the forehead.
Underneath the forehead are the eyes for seeing, the nose for smelling, and
the mouth for eating. On the outside of the mouth are the lips, and on the inside of the
mouth are the teeth for biting and the tongue for tasting. Food is swallowed down
the throat. At the sides of the face are the cheeks and at the sides of the head are
the ears for hearing. At the bottom of a person's face is the chin. The jaw is located on
the inside of the cheeks and chin. The neck is what attaches the head to the upper
body.
Upper Body
At the top and front of the upper body, just below the neck is the collar
bone. On the front side of the upper body is the chest, which in women
includes the breasts. Babies suck on the nipples of their mother's breasts.
Beneath the ribcage are the stomach and the waist. The navel, more commonly referred
to as the belly button, is located here as well. On the inside of the upper body are
the heart for pumping blood and the lungs for breathing. The rear side of the upper body
is called the back, inside which the spine connects the upper body to the lower body.
READING : HUMAN BODY
Lower Body
Below the waist, on left and right, are the hips. Between the hips are the
reproductive organs, the penis (male) or the vagina (female). At the back
of the lower body are the buttocks for sitting on.
They are also commonly referred to as the rear end or the bum (especially with
children). The internal organs in the lower body include the intestines for digesting
food, the bladder for holding liquid waste, as well as the liver and the kidneys. This area
also contains the woman's uterus, which holds a baby when a woman is pregnant.
READING : HUMAN BODY
The top of the leg is called the thigh, and the joint in the middle of the leg
is the knee.
The front of the lower leg is the shin and the back of the lower leg is the calf.
The ankle connects the foot to the leg. Each foot has five toes. The smallest toe is
often called the little toe while the large one is called the big toe. At the ends of the
toes are toenails.
2
Medical English – Present Continuous
• something that is happening around now, though not necessarily at the moment of
speaking.
Are you taking any medication?
I’m having chest pain
• Something that has been arranges for a date in the near future.
I’m seeing a physiotherapist next Wednesday.
The use of have in the present continuous refer to a moment of speaking is more limited than in
the Present Simple. It is generally restricted to expression such as:
- Have a difficulty + ing form
- Have something to eat and have a shower.
Doctor's Diagnosis - English Vocabulary
Example Sentences
Physician
Your test results have come in.
I'm afraid the prognosis isn't good.
You have a long road to recovery.
We have several options to discuss.
The blood test came back negative.
The transfusion was a success.
It looks like you're ready to go home.
I'd like to keep you here overnight.
We'll know more in a few days.
You're not in the clear yet.
We've ruled out diabetes.
I'm hoping to get to the bottom of this soon.
Doctor's Diagnosis - English Vocabulary
Example Sentences
Patient
Take a look into a physician’s typical day. With an average of 20 patients daily, physicians
jump from patient to patient and diagnosis to diagnosis. One may come in with a rash; the next
complains of heartburn; the next, chest pain; and so on. To fit 20 patients in a day, the little time
doctors spend with each patient creates room for misdiagnosis.
Research has confirmed that cognitive mistakes by physicians are the predominant cause of this
error.1 Although most medical cases are ultimately correctly diagnosed and treated, errors
leading to delay may result in poor quality of care, patient safety risks, increased costs, and, in
some cases, malpractice litigation. 2
This physician diagnosed a patient with a tension headache. But he failed to ask for a detailed
history and consider other diagnoses. If he had, he would have realized the patient is exposed to
carbon monoxide at work and that is the root cause of his headache.
Later in the day, a patient complained of dizziness and diagnosed it as benign positional vertigo.
He locked in on a diagnosis because of initial symptoms and failed to adjust. The patient
actually had suffered a cerebellar stroke.
Asking for more information and documenting all symptoms can seem impossible with big time
constraints but that is where VisualDx can help. The clinical diagnostic support system allows
frontline health care professionals to enter specific data about the patient’s condition and
quickly build a unique differential diagnosis for their patient. VisualDx users can then work
through the list of possible diagnoses to arrive at the best one, explain the process to the patient
and decide on the right treatment moving forward.
This technology puts fast and accurate diagnosis at your fingertips, lowering the risk of
misdiagnosis, contributing to a high quality of care and keeping patient safety top of mind.
3
Medical English – Past Simple
Positive
The coughing became worse this morning
Subject + Past Simple
Negative
The doctor didn’t’ come.
Subject + didn’t + infinitive
Questions
Did you take anything for the pain?
Did + subject + infinitive
Medical English – Past Simple
Positive
I/He/She/ It was
You/We/They were
Question
Was I/He/She/It?
Were You/we/they?
Negative
I/He/She/It wasn’t
You/We/They weren’t
Booking Appointments - Medical English
Example Sentences
Patient
Example Sentences
Receptionist
The imperative form of the verb can be used for giving very clear and direct
instructions.
Infinitive without to
Complete the drug charts.
Negative
Don’t/ Do not forget to complete the drug charts.
Adverbs
Always complete the drug chart.
Language Spot: Explain Procedures
The presente simple and You are used for describeing steps in a procedure.
Adverbs
You clean the area thoroughly.
Negative
Here is a list of some of the most common supplies found in doctors' offices, operating rooms and
medical kits
Term meaning
antiseptic liquid used to sterilize (clean) the surface of the
skin
hypodermic needle sharp pointed metal piece that pricks the skin (attached to a
syringe), used for taking blood or administering medicine
microscope equipment that makes small things appear larger than they
are
oxygen mask equipment that fits over the nose and mouth and supplies
oxygen
Medical Supplies - English Vocabulary
privacy screen an object that is used to separate the doctor and patient
from others in an open room
table and head-rest paper paper that is placed on an examining table or head-rest to
prevent the spread of germs
test tube glass cylinder that is filled with blood or other liquids and
can be capped and placed in a storage area
YES/NO QUESTIONS
We use YES/NO QUESTIONS when we only need a simple yes or no answer.
Other verbs, such as be, have got, and modal verbs don’t use the auxiliary do.
WH- QUESTIONS
We use questions beginning with a question word when we want someone to give us some
information.
Often, these came after a yes/no question.
Question word include what, which, who, when, where, why and how. The word how can be
used in expression such as how long, how much and how many, and is udes with a number of
adjectives and adverbs.
The question words what, which, how much and how many can be followed by a noun.
With both yes/no questions and wh- questions we use the present simple or present continuous
to talk about the present situation.
However, we use the Present Perfect or Present Perfect continuous to talk about a situation that
began in the past and which continues up to the present.
It’s important to remember that we don’t use the Present simple or Present continuous to
express this.
WH- QUESTION: How long have you had these dizzy spells?
How long have you been having difficulties with your
breathing?
Can you tell me more about your work /the pain/the headache?
POSITIVE
A needle is attached to the syringe.
SUBJECT + am /is/are + past participle
Example:
Active: The doctor attaches the needle to the syringe
Passive: The needle is attached to the syringe. (by the doctor)
NEGATIVE
The patient isn’t sedated for this procedure.
SUBJECT + am not/is not /are not + past participle
Example:
Active: A doctor does noy use a tourniquet in this procedure.
Passive: A tourniquet is not use in this procedure.
QUESTIONS
Is the syringe sterilized before that?
Am/are/is + SUBJECT + part participle
We can use the Present passive to describe how a procedure is carried out. Whereas
in the active it is necessaryto say who performs an action, the Passive avoids doing
this.
The Passive is preferred where the agent of the action is irrelevant, not know, or is
understood.
READING: TAKING AN X-RAY
A: Is this OK?
B: So far, so good.