Practice a Vietnam Doctor's Appointment
Visiting the doctor in Vietnam is high-stakes and high-value: getting your symptoms across precisely matters, and the medical vocabulary is mostly Latin-based across European languages. This scenario rehearses a general practitioner's appointment from check-in to prescription: describing symptoms with body parts and intensity, mentioning allergies and existing conditions, understanding the doctor's explanation, and reading a prescription. You'll practise the formal register doctors use, plus the verbs for pain, duration, and frequency. By the end, you'll handle a routine Vietnam-speaking appointment without needing a translator.
Mitä opit
- Check in at a Vietnam-speaking clinic
- Describe symptoms with body parts, duration, and intensity
- Mention allergies, medications, and chronic conditions
- Understand basic diagnosis and treatment instructions
- Read a Vietnam prescription and ask follow-up questions
Usein kysytyt kysymykset
How do I describe pain levels in Vietnam?
Use the Vietnam equivalent of 'mild, moderate, severe', plus 'sharp', 'dull', 'stabbing'. The vocabulary list covers this nuanced spectrum.
Will my Vietnam-speaking doctor speak English?
Often yes in big cities, often no in smaller towns. Even when they do, knowing the basic Vietnam medical vocabulary helps you describe symptoms more accurately.
How do I ask about side effects of medication in Vietnam?
There's a specific construction — 'What are the side effects?' — that the scenario teaches. Pharmacists often answer this more thoroughly than doctors.
What's the Vietnam for 'I'm allergic to penicillin'?
A critical sentence to memorise. We include it verbatim in the vocabulary list and rehearse it in the scenario.