English Vocabulary in Use Upper-intermediate » Unit 28: Health and medicine

Word List
  • ache
  • ankle
  • backache
  • bandage
  • black eye
  • blood pressure
  • break
  • breathless
  • bruise
  • bug
  • chest pains
  • contract v
  • depressed
  • diarrhoea
  • die
  • dislocate
  • dizzy
  • earache
  • exhausted
  • feel
  • get over
  • heart attack
  • hurt
  • indigestion
  • injection
  • itch
  • lose appetite
  • lose voice
  • lump
  • operate on
  • operation
  • pain
  • pick up
  • plaster
  • pollen
  • rash
  • shiver
  • shoulder
  • sickness
  • sore throat
  • spot
  • sprain
  • stressed
  • stroke
  • suffer
  • sunburn
  • tablet
  • teaspoonful
  • temperature
  • tremble
  • virus
  • wheelchair
  • wrist
Exercises

28.1 ‣ What problems from A opposite might result if someone …?

  1. eats too fast
  2. kicks someone's leg while playing football _____
  3. hits someone in the eye _____
  4. eats bad, rotten food _____
  5. lies too long in the hot sun _____
  6. runs much too fast to catch a bus _____

28.2 ‣ Read the remarks and answer the questions.

Casper: 'I must have picked up a bug when I was travelling.'

Dalma: 'My hand is covered in little red spots from where I touched that strange plant.'

Seth: 'It's an unpleasant pain. I hope I haven't got an ear infection.'

Zoe: 'The doctor said there's a risk I might suffer from heart disease if it continues.'

Write the people's names. Who has ... ?

  1. a rash?
  2. earache? _____
  3. a virus? _____
  4. high blood pressure? _____

28.3 ‣ Match the sentences on the left with the ones on the right.

  1. My shoulder is itching.
  2. My head hurts. _____
  3. I’m shivering. _____
  4. I’m trembling. _____
  5. I’m really stressed and exhausted. _____
  6. I’m depressed. _____
  1. a) I've been working too much.
  2. b) I feel so cold.
  3. c) I think I need to see a psychiatrist.
  4. d) I can't stop scratching it.
  5. e) I banged it as I walked through the low doorway.
  6. f) I feel very nervous and scared.

28.4 ‣ Match the pictures with the sentences.

  1. They put a bandage on my ankle.
  2. I had to have some injections. _____
  3. My arm was in plaster for weeks. _____
  4. I had to take two teaspoonfuls every night. _____
  5. They operated me immediately. _____
  6. I have to take two tablets every night at bed time. _____

One of the sentences above contains a mistake. Correct it.

28.5 ‣ Answer the questions.

  1. Which is correct? My aunt died (a) with (b) of a heart attack.
    _____
  2. What is a more formal way of saying these? (a) He got AIDS in 2001. (b) She had a stroke.
    _____
  3. What is an informal way of saying this? I had an infection but I recovered from it.
    _____

28.6 ‣

Over to you

Make a list of any of the problems mentioned in this unit that you yourself have had. What were the symptoms? What did you do to solve the problem(s)?
Answer Key
A ‣ What are your symptoms?


  1. rash

  2. bruise

  3. lump

  4. spots

  5. a black eye

All these noun phrases can be used with the verb have (got). I’ve got …
… a sore throat / a temperature [a higher temperature than normal] / high/low blood pressure / chest pains / backache / earache / a pain in my side / a rash on my chest / a bruise on my leg (e.g. after playing football) / a black eye (e.g. after being hit in the eye) / a lump on my arm / indigestion (after eating too fast) / sickness and diarrhoea /daɪəˈrɪə/ [an upset stomach which makes you vomit and need to go to the toilet frequently] / sunburn / a virus.

Verbs:
My back is aching. I shouldn’t have lifted all those heavy boxes.
My leg is itching - I think I’ve been bitten by an insect. [you want to scratch it all the time]
My hands are trembling after the shock of falling down. [shaking slightly]
I had a headache and started shivering. I knew it was the flu. [shake because you are cold]
My foot hurts from where I knocked it against the table.
I had a cold and it took me two weeks to get over it. [to get better; more formal = to recover from it]

Adjectives:
I feel sick / breathless / dizzy. [my head is spinning]
I am depressed / exhausted / stressed.

Other expressions:
I’ve lost my appetite / voice.
I think I’ve picked up a bug somewhere. [infml = caught a virus or infection]
I’ve broken my wrist / sprained my ankle / dislocated my shoulder.
She died of a heart attack.
He contracted AIDS. [infml = ‘got’]
My uncle suffered a stroke. [sudden change in the blood supply to a part of the brain, which can cause a loss of the ability to move particular parts of the body; infml = ‘had’]

B ‣ What does the doctor prescribe?

Take a teaspoonful of medicine last thing at night.

We’ll get the nurse to put a bandage on your wrist.

You’ll need to have some injections before you go to the Amazon.

I’m afraid you’re going to need an operation.

You’ll have to have your leg put in plaster until the break mends.

I’m going to give you some tablets - take one in the morning and one at night.

Common mistakes

A surgeon operates on a patient.

They decided to operate on her and remove the tumour. (NOT They decided to operate her.)

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