Medical translation

Medical translation is the practice of translating various documents—training materials, medical bulletins, drug data sheets, etc.—for health care, medical devices, marketing, or for clinical, regulatory, and technical documentation. Most countries require that companies and organizations translate literature and labeling for medical devices or pharmaceuticals into their national language. Documents for clinical trials often require translation for local clinicians and patients and regulatory representatives. Regulatory approval submissions typically must be translated.[1][2] In addition to linguistic skills, medical translation requires specific training and subject matter knowledge because of the highly technical, sensitive, and regulated nature of medical texts.

Process

Medical translation steps can include:

  • Extracting text from source format
  • Translating text to the target language
  • Editing by a separate person to assure adherence to approved terminology and proper style and voice
  • Publishing the translation in the original format (e.g., Word document, Web page, e-learning program)
  • Proofreading to ensure the formatted translation has proper punctuation and line and page breaks, and displays correctly
  • Reviewing in-country by a native-speaking expert to ensure the translation meets all requirements

Translation agencies may oversee both project management and linguistic aspects.

Quality and Standards

The life and death nature of medical texts mandates a strong emphasis on translation quality.[3] The international medical industry is highly regulated, and companies who must translate documentation typically choose translation agencies certified or compliant with one or more of the following standards:

Because of high amounts of specificities, regulations, and challenges in the field of medical translations, lately, some specialized translation companies emerged, this kind of agencies deals with medical field related translations exclusively, furthermore, some have medical practitioners aboard to supervise the processes.[4]

gollark: This compact machine is filled with three fusion reactors, a small local ME network for fluid handling, battery buffers, 7 heavy water pumps, and my AMAZING wiring.
gollark: So they don't go into the reactor when you're cycling it on and off.
gollark: Take the cells you have in the input slot out.
gollark: You *can* also just shuffle around the innards of the reactor without actually losing any fuel, as long as you break not the controller.
gollark: Make sure to take the cells you have left in there out!

See also

References

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