This gentleman was
presented to the Royal
Derby Hospital
on…’
There’s something oddly archaic about it, something almost
Victorian in its linguistic sensibility, something which evokes images of the
early days of modern medical practice. It’s why I can’t decide whether it makes
me sound like some sort of prize or some sort of specimen.
3 comments:
J was taught in school never to refer to patients as "a male" or "a female." It's considered dehumanizing. There's a particular way in which certain people use the word "females" to refer to women that rubs me the wrong way, like they're talking about a group of gazelle in a show about wildlife. I don't think US doctors use "gentleman" or "lady." They say "man" and "woman." Although apparently the acronym LOL (for Little Old Lady) was in use for a while before it was discouraged and abandoned.
But do the STD clinics still use FYI (Fornicating Young Idiot)?
I think they just call them "millennials."
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