Have you ever attended a lecture and when it was over you thought, I didn’t understand any of what the speaker was talking about. Maybe if he or she had used normal words I would have understood the point they were trying to make. That person must really know their stuff. What makes things worse is when you look at all the other attendees. They are applauding and commenting on how intelligent the speaker is. Now you may be thinking, boy, am I dumb? I wish the person had spoken a little plainer, so I knew what they were talking about. Was all that technical jargon necessary or was it meant to impress the audience with how smart they are?
You don’t need to attend a lecture to experience this under-educated feeling, simply visit your doctor. As part of their curriculum, medical schools must train their students on how to present themselves as being the smartest person in the room, or they will be a disgrace to the profession. To reinforce this aura of superiority they must learn to speak portions of dead languages to describe simple ailments. Many words in the English language are derived from Latin and ancient Greek, but no one uses the original version, except doctors. Even the Catholic Church gave up using Latin in a large segment of its service. Why should people attend a service where they don’t know what’s being said, when they can cross the street and understand everything?
Okay, let’s look at some of the more uncommon words that are used by the family physician to describe normal ailments. You have had an accident and want your doctor to check out the injury. Assuming you are fortunate enough to see the doctor and not one of the Mini-Me’s, you will be examined and may be told, “You have a Contusion or Ecchymosis on your right Femur or Femoral Region.” Naturally your first response might be, “how serious is this, Doc? Do I need to go to the hospital?” What you’ve actually been told is, you have a bruise on your right thigh. The translation sounds far less ominous, but not nearly as professional.
Let’s try another phrase doctors use quite often, Hypertension. We’ve all heard the word hyper before. The definition is unusually energetic. Tension is another common word meaning stretched tight or mental or emotional strain. When a doctor combines the two words he’s talking about high blood pressure. Wouldn’t be less stressful on the patient to be told he or she had a condition that they didn’t have to ask, “what’s that mean?” I’m not saying that high blood pressure isn’t serious, but why amplify the patients concern by using a term they don’t understand.
Let’s try a simple comparison. You bring your car to a mechanic because it’s running rough. He checks it out and reports that your ride has developed an acute embolism. Your brain goes into overdrive, and you start to wonder how much a new car is going to cost you. Your next question is what’s that and what will it cost to fix it? The mechanic responds that your car has a clogged fuel line, and it will cost $200.00 to replace it. The stress level is drastically reduced, and you get the car fixed. If he had said that to begin with, there wouldn’t be any stress.
Here is a word you hope to never hear from your doctor, Idiopathic. What he’s telling you is you have a condition that he hasn’t got a clue what it is. You’ve gone through all the blood testing, been run through all the alphabet soup machines, MRI, CAT scan, X-rays, eco-cardiogram, and everything says you’re normal. Now you’re back to where you started, minus a chunk of cash. If only the medical profession would tell it like it is.
About the Creator
Mark Gagnon
My life has been spent traveling here and abroad. Now it's time to write.
I have three published books: Mitigating Circumstances, Short Stories for Open Minds, and Short Stories from an Untethered Mind. Unmitigated Greed is do out soon.


Comments (10)
Hi Mark; not your real name...Ha! I just wrote ~A+A-Ai~ and 'Script writing is currently being replaced by Ai - So many professions can easily be 'Swallowed' up; including mine.! Best, Jay
You somehow made this incredibly frustrating experience incredibly comical, lol.Doctor speak is so dramatic, haha!
Here's a word your doctor probably won't use, even if s/he has caused to: iatragrenic. Means "caused by the doctor".
Haha, this is such a fun take on the over-complication of language, especially when it comes to medical terms! How doctors and speakers sometimes use fancy words to sound smarter than they are. Like, if they just said, “You’ve got a bruise” instead of all the medical jargon, it’d save everyone the confusion and stress. “Idiopathic” just sounds like a doctor’s way of saying, “I have no idea,” but thanks for the bill anyway!😆
It’s not so much the language that scares me over here but the cost of everything. Even with insurance. I don’t think I’ll ever get used to that. Hope you’re doing ok Mark? Wishing you all the best for the new year.
Help, I thought idiopathic means I'm an idiot, as in they were calling me an idiot 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Like how I thought a pedometer was a pedophile detector. Yes, I'm not very bright 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 As for the terms that doctors or people in the medical field use, they need to dumb it down when talking with patients
Have you ever looked at a doctor's student loan balance? I suppose they need to get something out of a sunk cost that large. A little bit o' Latin and a lot of Meta language. Diggin' your rant, Mark! PS. Just because people are clapping during the lecture does not mean they understood any of it!
This is a hilarious way of telling us the medical profession are snobs. Excellent
100% agree!
Idiopathic.... hate that word, feel like it was invented by an idiot... 😅 This was great, thought provoking and insightful Mark!! Nicely done!!