Perfect Phrases for ESL Everyday Situations
Perfect Phrases for ESL Everyday Situations
CHAPTER 

Emergency Room and Hospital Care
Hopefully, you or your loved ones may never need emergency medical care or a hospital stay, but if you do, you must be prepared to communicate quickly, clearly, and effectively. Do not wait until an emergency to know and understand essential phrases.
In the United States, you dial 9-1-1 on the telephone to reach an emergency operator who can coordinate help for you. The number you call is pronounced “nine-one-one,” not “nine-eleven.” To Americans and many others, “nine eleven” refers to the date of September (the ninth month) 11, 2001, when terrorists attacked the World Trade Center towers in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, DC.
If you hear “Call 9-1-1!” it means to call those numbers on a telephone.
Reasons to call 9-1-1 include police and fire emergencies, which are covered in Part 3, Chapters 12 and 13, as well as true medical emergencies. Don’t confuse 9-1-1 with 4-1-1, which is for information—specifically, finding out telephone numbers—or 0 for operator, which is for telephone problems only.
Phrases You May Hear if You Call 9-1-1


























If you call 9-1-1, be brief. Say what you have to say and what the operator needs to hear in order to get you help as soon as possible. If a person who is fluent in English is with you, give him/her the phone, but don’t take the time to go look for someone. Answer all the questions you are asked by the professional on the phone as best you can, and do what that person tells you to do until help arrives.
Phrases You Say if Calling 9-1-1











Sometimes people with serious medical issues go to the emergency room at a hospital on their own, by themselves, or by car if they are able to. There is reserved parking for the emergency department.
In the emergency room, patients are treated, after being assessed, in the order of the seriousness of their conditions. This method is called triage. Emergency rooms in hospitals are often very crowded, and you may have to wait quite a while before being seen by a nurse or doctor.
Phrases You May Hear in an Emergency Room or at a Reception Desk



















Phrases You May Hear from a Doctor or Nurse











Phrases You May Hear When Leaving a Hospital











The move from an emergency room to a hospital stay or even back home is a traumatic transition. You have been through an ordeal and may be nervous, frightened, scared, or worried. Certainly, you will be worn out. Sometimes being admitted to the hospital is a precaution or because of a minor issue. Remain positive and calm; this attitude could even improve your condition.
Idioms and Other Vocabulary
Admitting: hospital department where you/they fill out forms before you become a patient in a hospital
Airways blocked: breathing passages not clear
AMA: against medical advice
Ambulance: special vehicle used to take sick or hurt people to the hospital
Assessed: judged, decided on
Blood relative: a person related to you by birth
Breathing problems: trouble breathing without help
Brief: short
By oneself (or myself, or yourself, or himself, or herself, or ourselves, or yourselves, or themselves): alone
Calm: relaxed
Can speak: is able to talk after the injury or illness
Choking: unable to breathe
Confuse: mistake one thing and think it is a different thing
CPR (see also mouth-to-mouth resuscitation): cardiopulmonary resuscitation, breathing into the victim’s mouth and pushing on his/her chest to restart breathing and the heart beating
Cross street: the street that meets your street at the corner and leads to and from your street
Crowded: filled with many people or things
Dizzy: feeling unbalanced, not steady on your feet
Emergency room (also emergency department): section of a hospital that treats patients who are seriously injured or sick
EMTs: emergency medical technicians
Fill in (also fill out): give written information asked for on a form
Finding out: getting information
Heart attack: condition when the heart stops working
Hemorrhaging: bleeding very heavily
Inpatient: a person staying in the hospital for at least one night
Interpret: change into another language (Interpret is for spoken language; translate is for written language.)
Keep warm: cover with a blanket, coat, or what you have
Language Line: service that makes interpreters and translators available on the telephone
Look for: try to locate
Medicaid: U.S. government program that helps pay for medical care for people without money to pay
Medicare: U.S. government program that helps pay for medical care for older people
Mouth-to-mouth resuscitation: part of CPR, breathing into someone’s mouth to start up his/her breathing
On one’s own: without help
Ordeal: very difficult situation
Outpatient: a person who comes to the hospital for an emergency or even for a surgery but goes home without staying overnight
Precaution: preventative action taken to stop something dangerous from happening
Print: put down letters one by one without joining or connecting them
Procedures: way of doing certain things
Professional: person trained to perform certain work
Quite a while: a lot of time
Relationship: connection, the way two people are connected
Remain: stay, don’t leave
Reserved: saved for
Responsible for: in charge of
Scene: place where something happened
Signature: your name signed for legal papers
Specialist: doctor who treats one area of medicine or one disease (for example, a cardiologist treats heart disease, and a pulmonologist treats diseases of the lungs).
Stroke: illness in which blood in an artery stops moving
Talk you through: give you instructions in how to do something
Transition: change
Translate: change into another language (Translate is for written language; interpret is for spoken language.)
Traumatic: very disturbing
Treated: taken care of medically
Triage: system of giving emergency medical care according to the seriousness of the injury or illness
True medical emergencies: serious accidents or serious illness, such as heart attacks, strokes, choking, breathing problems, and hemorrhaging
Victim: person who is ill (sick) or very hurt
Weak: not physically strong
Wheelchair: a chair with wheels used to wheel someone who cannot or should not walk when leaving a hospital (After someone has been a patient, hospitals have a rule that they not walk or leave without a hospital employee.)
Worn out: very tired
Write: Form letters by hand that are attached, not printed separately