Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare (Feb 2020)
Linguistic Factors in Arabic for Miscommunication of Medication Names
Abstract
Taqi F Hashmi Family Physician, Primary Health Care Corporation, Doha, QatarCorrespondence: Taqi F HashmiFamily Physician, Primary Health Care Corporation, PO Box 26555, Doha, QatarEmail [email protected]: A commentary and analysis on the miscommunication of medication names between native Arabic-speaking patients and pharmacists with a native English-speaking family physician using Medical English as a Lingua Franca (MELF), in a healthcare context. An important cause of communication difficulties is the different way native English and native Arabic speakers linguistically process medication names when using MELF. This is likely to be explained by the differences in the native grammars of English and Arabic which determine differences in pronunciation and predict potential error prone groupings of letters and sounds. This in turn leads to repeating linguistic errors such as epenthesis (insertion of additional vowels between consonants) and metathesis (the swapping of adjacent consonants). The article highlights a case where both epenthesis and metathesis occur simultaneously leading to a potential serious adverse event through a medication error and suggests further avenues of research to minimise such errors.Keywords: medication errors, Arabic, metathesis, epenthesis, Medical English as a Lingua Franca, MELF