Welcome to Medical Terminology
description
Transcript of Welcome to Medical Terminology
Welcome to Medical Terminology
Nena Scott, MSEd, RHIA, CCS, CCSP
Course Outcomes
Upon successfully completing this course, you will be able to: Define the word elements of a medical term. Formulate proper definitions of presented medical terms. Compose accurate medical terms, based on established
medical terminology guidelines. Demonstrate the singular and plural forms of medical
terminology. Interpret simulated medical reports using medical
terminology. Demonstrate the ability to translate medical terminology and
information into layman’s terms for non-medical personnel or patients.
General Information• Print the syllabus and keep available to reference
during the term.
• Due dates for each unit is located on the syllabus
• Weekly unit assignments will include Seminar Discussion Board Unit Exams Unit 5 and 8 Projects
• A weekly announcements will be posted on Wednesday that will outline the weeks requirements
Contact Information Kaplan Email Address: [email protected]
Course/Seminar Day and Time (ET)Section Instructor Seminar
Date /Time (ET)
1 Nena Scott Wed. 4:00pm
18 Nena Scott Wed. 10:00pm
19 Christine Hollander Wed. 11:00am
26FT Christine Hollander Wed. 1:00pm
5 Cheryl Kester Tues. 8:00pm
Accessing Flex Seminar
To access your seminar: Log in to your home page and click on the course for which
you are attending seminar. This will open two windows. The narrow window is called the remote control.
In the remote control, please click on the “Open Seminar” heading at the bottom of the remote.
Click the blue underlined text that says "Enter KHE Seminar." After a brief pause, you will be in the seminar. Your name should appear on the left side of the screen. You can enter seminar a maximum of 30 minutes before the scheduled session start time. If you select this link at any other time you will be taken to the archive for KHE Seminar.
For additional instructions, review the Flex Seminar Student User Guide found in Doc Sharing in the classroom.
How to Label Your Work• Projects: Please label your projects: Student
Name – project name - unit#.doc. For example, a student named Tina Allen would name her file Tina Allen Anatomical Terminology Unit 5.doc.
• Seminar Option 2: Please label your seminars: Student Name-seminar-unit#.doc (for example, Tina Allen Seminar Unit 3.doc)
• Email Subject Lines: Please start your subject lines in email correspondence with Course & section username: SUBJECT_OF_MESSAGE (for example, HS111-12AU-Tina Allen: Question regarding project) (Make sure you put the section number because I teach multiple sections.)
Projects
• Templates for projects are located in DocSharing
• A description of all projects can be found under unit 5 and 8 in the course
• Project should be completed in Microsoft Word and submitted in the drop box.
• Projects should be completed using APA style formatting
Seminar
Option 1 Purpose – interact with class mates, review
important points of each lesson, answer questions and concerns of students.
Expectations - participate in discussion, arrive on time and stay the whole hour.
Grading rubric used to assign grade
Option 2 Takes place of one hour seminar Tougher grading criteria – grading rubric
used to assign grade
Discussion• Please do not work ahead on the discussion board because staying
together on the discussion will help everyone in the learning process.
• Your initial discussion board post is due by Saturday night
• Posting the initial post early in the week will help you because you will need to respond to two post to receive the total 35 points.
• Also, posting early in the week will give me time to respond and in my response I try to give you a challenge question and your response to my question will count as one of the required responses.
• It is important to have quality discussion board post to enhance learning.
• Make sure you utilize spell check and list all references.
Chapter 1
Introduction to Word Parts
OBJECTIVES
• Identify and define the four word parts
• Identify and define a combining form
• Analyze and define medical terms
• Build medical terms for given definitions
Understand the Content of Chapter 1 Before Moving on to Chapter 2
• Chapter 1 is the most important chapter in the text because it is here that you are introduced to word parts—word roots, prefixes, suffixes, and combining vowels—and the rules for combining them to build medical terms.
• You will use this information in each of the subsequent chapters to analyze, build, define, and spell terms built from word parts
Medicine Has a Language of Its Own
Current medical vocabulary includes terms built from Greek and Latin word parts, eponyms, acronyms, and terms from modern language
Origins of Medical Language
The 4 Word Parts
Word Root: Fundamental meaning of a medical term
Prefix: Attached to beginning of a medical term to modify its meaning
Suffix: Attached to end of a medical term to modify its meaning
Combining Vowel: Used to ease pronunciation - usually an “o” (e, i, or u)
Examples
Word Roots: arthr: joint hepat: liver
ven: vein oste: bone
Prefixes: intra-: within sub-: under
Suffixes: -itis: inflammation -ic: pertaining to -ous: pertaining to -pathy: disease
Combining vowel: o
Combining Form
Word Root + Combining Vowels
Examples: arthr/o hepat/o ven/o oste/o
Examples of word parts and combining vowel in use
P WR S P WR S WR CV WR S
sub/hepat/ic intra/ven/ous oste/o/arthr/itis
Some Basic Rules
• All medical terms have at least one word root
• Not all medical terms have a prefix, suffix, or combining vowel
• Combining vowels are used to connect word roots or word root and suffix
• When a suffix begins with a vowel, the combining vowel is not used
Example: arthritis (“o”)
Some Basic Rules (cont’d)
• When connecting two word roots, a combining vowel is usually used even if vowels are present at the junction
Example: oste/o/arthr/itis
• Usually medical terms are defined by starting at the end of the term and going back to the beginning
Example: oste/o/arthr/itis─inflammation of the bone and joints
Some Basic Rules (cont’d)
• A few terms are more easily and accurately defined by starting at the beginning of the term.
Example: melan/oma
melan = black
-oma = tumor
Word Parts for PracticeWord Roots:(Comb. Forms)
arthr/o: joint
hepat/o: liver
ven/o: vein
osteo: bone
Combining Vowel:o
Prefixes:
intra-: within
sub-: under
Suffixes:
-itis: inflammation
-ic: pertaining to
-ous: pertaining
-pathy: disease
Analyze and Define
• arthritis
• intravenous
• osteitis
• osteoarthritis
• subhepatic
• osteopathy
• arthropathy
• hepatitis
Building Medical Terms
arthr/itis - inflammation of joints
intra/ven/ous - pertaining to within a vein
oste/itis - inflammation of the bone
oste/o/arthr/itis - inflammation of the bone and joint
sub/hepat/ic - pertaining to under the liver
oste/o/pathy - disease of the bone
arthr/o/pathy - disease of the joint
hepat/itis - inflammation of the liver
Review – Chapter 11. Most medical terms in current use are composed of what type of
word parts? 2. What is acronym?3. What is a medical term derived from the name of a person
called?4. Each medical term build from word parts contain one or more5. A prefix is a word part that6. The word part that is the core of the word is a7. A word root with the combining vowel attached and separated by
a forward slash is a(n)8. When analyzing a medical term build from word parts, the
combining vowel would be labeled as9. In the medical term hepatitis, the word part hepat is a10. In the medical term intravenous, the word part intra is11. In the medical term arthritis, what is the word part itis 12. In the medical term arthropathy, what is the word part arthro
Answers1. Greek and Latin word parts
2. Formed from the first letters of words in a phrase
3. Eponym
4. Word Roots
5. Attaches to the beginning of a medical word
6. Word root
7. Combining form
8. CV
9. Word root
10. Prefix
11. Suffix
12. Combining Form
Questions & After Seminar
• Review the rubrics for grading and let me know if you have questions
• Contact me: On AIM - NenaSctt Kaplan Email - [email protected] Questions?