Jun 1, 2013 17:56
11 yrs ago
14 viewers *
Italian term

negare

Non-PRO Italian to English Medical Medical (general) certificato di frequenza
paziente di lingua straniera,nega allergie a farmaci,nega patologie degne di nota
Change log

Jun 2, 2013 00:43: philgoddard changed "Level" from "PRO" to "Non-PRO"

Jun 2, 2013 09:34: writeaway changed "Field (specific)" from "Medical (general)" to "General / Conversation / Greetings / Letters"

Jun 2, 2013 09:35: writeaway changed "Field (specific)" from "General / Conversation / Greetings / Letters" to "Medical (general)"

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

Non-PRO (3): Daniela Zambrini, Joseph Tein, philgoddard

When entering new questions, KudoZ askers are given an opportunity* to classify the difficulty of their questions as 'easy' or 'pro'. If you feel a question marked 'easy' should actually be marked 'pro', and if you have earned more than 20 KudoZ points, you can click the "Vote PRO" button to recommend that change.

How to tell the difference between "easy" and "pro" questions:

An easy question is one that any bilingual person would be able to answer correctly. (Or in the case of monolingual questions, an easy question is one that any native speaker of the language would be able to answer correctly.)

A pro question is anything else... in other words, any question that requires knowledge or skills that are specialized (even slightly).

Another way to think of the difficulty levels is this: an easy question is one that deals with everyday conversation. A pro question is anything else.

When deciding between easy and pro, err on the side of pro. Most questions will be pro.

* Note: non-member askers are not given the option of entering 'pro' questions; the only way for their questions to be classified as 'pro' is for a ProZ.com member or members to re-classify it.

Proposed translations

+3
11 mins
Selected

denies / says he/she has not

...
Peer comment(s):

neutral Joseph Tein : In medical writing, it's always "denies" in this section of the report (the medical history).
43 mins
I bow to our technical expertise Joseph, though this seems specific US terminology from a site:uk Google
agree Lirka : yes, denies is standard ( I assume the other entry of yours is merely to simplify it for the asker)
1 hr
agree philgoddard : Don't know why Joseph clicked on "neutral" rather than "agree".
2 hrs
agree Shera Lyn Parpia
13 hrs
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
+1
12 mins

deny

as in:
Patient denies allergy

http://www.docstoc.com/docs/21536488/General-Surgery-Center

As simple as that
Peer comment(s):

agree Joseph Tein : Extremely simple.
40 mins
Something went wrong...

Reference comments

2 hrs
Reference:

The patient denies

The patient denies
This phrase does not mean that the doctor thinks you're lying. It's just used as the opposite of "the patient reports." For instance, your medical record might read, "The patient reports frequent morning cough, but denies the presence of phlegm."

http://oreilly.com/medical/lymphoma/news/nhl7.html

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=373980
Peer comments on this reference comment:

agree writeaway
12 hrs
Thank you writeaway :-)
Something went wrong...
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search