Specialist document review
Files are assessed by document type, language pair, final use and formatting requirements.
Professional medical translation
LinguaVox translates medical documents for organisations that need accuracy, confidentiality and a workflow adapted to the final use of the text. Projects may involve clinical reports, medical correspondence, hospital forms, healthcare websites, patient information, training material, scientific content or documentation shared between teams in different countries.
The right workflow depends on the source document, the target language, the reader and the degree of risk. A medical website for patients does not require the same checks as a clinical report, a technical file for a device or a certified translation for an administrative procedure. LinguaVox reviews those factors before confirming the quote.
Files are assessed by document type, language pair, final use and formatting requirements.
Terminology can be controlled with glossaries, translation memories and previous approved material.
Independent review, proofreading or DTP checks can be added according to the risk and use of the file.
Projects can be prepared for UK, US, European or wider international use.
Quality management system focused on traceability, process organisation and continuous improvement.
Specific standard for professional translation services with independent revision.
Internal supervision by experienced translation project managers before final delivery.
Medical translation often starts with files that were not written for translation. Reports may contain abbreviations, stamps, tables, handwritten notes or references to local healthcare systems. When those elements appear, the project manager needs to know whether they must be translated, reproduced, explained or left in the same format.
LinguaVox can handle medical records, discharge summaries, diagnostic reports, laboratory results, medical certificates, consent forms, health questionnaires, insurance reports, patient leaflets and clinical correspondence. The aim is to make the content usable in the target language without turning a medical document into generic prose.
Clinical reports and records handled with the terminology, review level and file checks required by the project.
Healthcare websites and patient information handled with the terminology, review level and file checks required by the project.
Hospital forms and insurance documentation handled with the terminology, review level and file checks required by the project.
Medical correspondence and training material handled with the terminology, review level and file checks required by the project.
Before work starts, the file is checked for language pair, format, legibility, repetitions, technical terminology and final use. This step is practical, not bureaucratic. It avoids quoting a scanned table as if it were editable text, or treating a patient leaflet as if it were a short internal email.
For this type of project, the relevant internal route may lead to a related specialist service or to a language-specific medical translation page. Internal linking is useful for the user because the same source file can require different handling depending on the sector, target language and receiving organisation.
LinguaVox works with a quality system certified under ISO 9001 and with translation workflows aligned with ISO 17100. For full machine translation post-editing, the process can also follow ISO 18587. These standards matter because medical content often requires traceability, revision by a second professional and clear project instructions before delivery.
The practical control is not limited to a certificate. A project manager checks the files, confirms the language pair, reviews special instructions, watches for formatting issues and verifies whether the final document needs a specific delivery format. In multilingual work, this coordination prevents inconsistent terminology, mixed variants of English and fragmented versions of the same medical text.
Medical terminology can be stable inside one organisation and different in another. Brand names, device parts, study terms, abbreviations and patient-facing expressions should not change randomly from one file to the next. When the client has a glossary, translation memory, previous approved version or style guide, those resources should be reviewed before translation starts.
In larger assignments, LinguaVox can coordinate several translators and reviewers while keeping one project manager responsible for instructions, delivery format and final control. This is especially useful when English, Spanish, German, French, Italian, Portuguese, Arabic, Russian or Chinese versions must be delivered as part of the same medical or pharmaceutical project.
For an accurate quote, send the source files whenever possible and indicate the target language, the country where the translation will be used, the deadline and the expected format. A PDF, a scanned record, an editable Word file and an InDesign document can require very different amounts of work, even when the visible word count is similar.
If the content is confidential, regulated or intended for an authority, mention that from the start. The project manager can then confirm whether the project should be handled as specialist medical translation, certified translation, bilingual revision, DTP work or a larger multilingual assignment with terminology management.
Questions clients ask
Typical documents include clinical reports and records, healthcare websites and patient information, hospital forms and insurance documentation and medical correspondence and training material. The exact workflow depends on the file format, target language, reader and intended use. If the document will be submitted to an authority, the quote should also state whether certification is required.
Yes. LinguaVox can translate medical, clinical, pharmaceutical and healthcare documents into English and from English into other languages. The target market should be indicated because British English, US English and international English may require different terminology, spelling or institutional references.
Independent revision can be included where the project requires an ISO 17100-style workflow or where the risk profile justifies a second professional check. Some projects also need proofreading, terminology review, DTP checking or certification. The scope should be confirmed before work starts.
Urgent requests can be assessed, but the deadline has to be realistic for the volume, language pair and review level. In medical translation, urgency should not mean removing necessary checks. If the file is short and legible, a faster turnaround may be possible.
Send the source file, target language, target country, intended use, deadline and preferred final format. For PDFs, scans, certificates or layout-heavy documents, the file itself is needed. For regulated or certified use, the receiving authority’s instructions are also useful.
Yes. LinguaVox can assess Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF, scanned files, InDesign packages and other common formats. The quote depends on legibility, layout complexity, language combination and the type of final delivery required. If a document needs layout checking after translation, that step should be included from the start.
Only when the content and the client instructions make it appropriate. Many medical files require direct specialist translation or full human review because terminology, dosage, abbreviations and context can be sensitive. When post-editing is used, the workflow must still include professional control and clear expectations about the final quality level.
Quote request
Include the language pair, intended use, deadline and any certification or formatting requirement. A LinguaVox project manager will review the files before confirming the workflow.