Perth Translation Services » Croatian Medical Translation
Croatian Health Medical Translation
We have Croatian translators with experience and background in health and medical translations to complete medical translation requirements, from medical letters and receipts for insurance purposes, to complex medical reports or research papers.
As medical and pharmaceutical Croatian translations is a specialised discipline, not all Croatian translators are able to deliver translations for medical documents. Perth Translation provides medical Croatian translations for documents such as:
- Pre-Clinical Reports
- CMC Documentation
- Clinical Trial Agreements
- Clinical Trial Results
- ICFs
- Investigation Brochures
- Interview Transcripts
- Packaging and Labeling
- Marketing Materials
- Medical Protocols
- Medical Research Papers
- Survey Results
Additional effort in finding the right professional Croatian translator goes a long way in ensuring reliable and consistent quality translations for medical and pharmaceutical documents. Enquire with us today with your project requirement.
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Medical Translations For All Major Languages
- Arabic Medical Translation
- Chinese Medical Translation
- Catalan Medical Translation
- Croatian Medical Translation
- Czech Medical Translation
- Estonian Medical Translation
- Dutch Medical Translation
- Finnish Medical Translation
- French Medical Translation
- German Medical Translation
- Greek Medical Translation
- Hindi Medical Translation
- Hungarian Medical Translation
- Indonesian Medical Translation
- Italian Medical Translation
- Japanese Medical Translation
- Korean Medical Translation
- Macedonian Medical Translation
- Malay Medical Translation
- Norwegian Medical Translation
- Persian Medical Translation
- Polish Medical Translation
- Portuguese Medical Translation
- Punjabi Medical Translation
- Romanian Medical Translation
- Russian Medical Translation
- Serbian Medical Translation
- Slovak Medical Translation
- Spanish Medical Translation
- Swedish Medical Translation
- Tagalog Medical Translation
- Thai Medical Translation
- Turkish Medical Translation
- Ukrainian Medical Translation
- Urdu Medical Translation
- Vietnamese Medical Translation
About the Croatian Language
Croatian is the standardized variety of the Serbo-Croatian language used by Croats, principally in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Serbian province of Vojvodina and other neighboring countries. Croatian is one of the official languages of the European Union, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Standard Croatian is based on the most widespread dialect of Serbo-Croatian, Shtokavian, more specifically on Eastern Herzegovinian, which is also the basis of Standard Serbian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin.
Croatian, although technically a form of Serbo-Croatian, is sometimes considered a distinct language by itself. Purely linguistic considerations of languages based on mutual intelligibility (abstand languages) are frequently incompatible with political conceptions of language so that varieties that are mutually intelligible can not be considered separate languages. Differences between various standard forms of Serbo-Croatian are often exaggerated for political reasons. Most Croatian linguists regard Croatian as a separate language that is considered key to national identity. The issue is sensitive in Croatia as the notion of a separate language being the most important characteristic of a nation is widely accepted, stemming from the 19th-century history of Europe. The 1967 Declaration on the Status and Name of the Croatian Literary Language, in which a group of Croatian authors and linguists demanded greater autonomy for the Croatian language, is viewed in Croatia as a linguistic policy milestone that was also a general milestone in national politics. At the 50th anniversary of the Declaration, at the beginning of 2017, a two-day meeting of experts from Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro was organized in Zagreb, at which the text of the Declaration on the Common Language of Croats, Bosniaks, Serbs and Montenegrins was drafted. The new Declaration has received more than ten thousand signatures. It states that in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Montenegro a common polycentric standard language is used, consisting of several standard varieties, such as German, English or Spanish. The aim of the new Declaration is to stimulate discussion on language without the nationalistic baggage and to counter nationalistic divisions.
The terms "Serbo-Croatian" or "Serbo-Croat" are still used as a cover term for all these forms by foreign scholars, even though the speakers themselves largely do not use it. Within ex-Yugoslavia, the term has largely been replaced by the ethnic terms Serbian, Croatian, and Bosnian.
Croatian Translation Expertise
Croatian has seven grammatical cases and three grammatical genders, producing a highly inflected system where nouns, adjectives, and pronouns change form depending on their role in the sentence. Word order is relatively free because case endings carry the grammatical information, but this flexibility means translators must carefully parse which word modifies which. Croatian also has a productive system of verbal aspect (perfective vs. imperfective) that affects meaning in legal contexts — the difference between a completed action and an ongoing one can be legally significant.
Croatian uses the Latin alphabet exclusively (unlike Serbian, which also uses Cyrillic) with 30 letters including č, ć, dž, đ, lj, nj, š, and ž. The digraphs lj, nj, and dž are each treated as single letters in alphabetical ordering. Each letter represents exactly one sound, making the orthography highly phonemic.
Common Croatian Documents
Croatian documents commonly requiring translation include the rodni list (birth certificate), vjenčani list (marriage certificate), domovnica (certificate of citizenship), svjedodžba (school report/transcript), and potvrda o nekažnjavanju (criminal record certificate). As an EU member, Croatia now also issues multilingual standard civil status forms that simplify the translation process.
NAATI offers certification for Croatian as a language distinct from Serbian and Bosnian. Australia has a well-established Croatian community, so qualified NAATI-certified translators are readily available, particularly in Melbourne, Sydney, and Perth.
About the Croatian Language
Croatian is one of the most phonetically consistent languages in Europe — every letter is always pronounced the same way, and every sound is always written the same way, with absolutely no silent letters or ambiguous spellings. The Croatian language has a unique claim to fame in computing history: the word "robot" entered English from the Czech/Croatian cultural sphere, and Croat Faust Vrančić designed one of the earliest parachutes in 1617 and published a five-language dictionary. Croatia also invented the necktie — the word "cravat" derives from "Croat" (Hrvat), after Croatian mercenaries' distinctive neck scarves caught Parisian fashion attention in the 17th century.
Industry Translation Requirements
Australia's healthcare system serves a multilingual population, with hospitals, clinics, and health services requiring translated patient information, consent forms, and medical records. International medical graduates must provide translated qualifications for registration with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA), and pharmaceutical companies need translated clinical documentation for TGA submissions.
Medical translation demands precise knowledge of anatomical terminology, pharmacological nomenclature, and Australian clinical coding systems (ICD-10-AM). Mistranslation of drug dosages, contraindications, or surgical procedures can have life-threatening consequences, making specialist medical translators essential.
Common documents include patient medical records and discharge summaries, informed consent forms, TGA clinical trial applications, AHPRA registration applications for international health practitioners, pharmaceutical product information sheets, and Medicare claim documentation for overseas treatment.
AHPRA requires NAATI-certified translations of overseas medical qualifications for practitioner registration. The TGA mandates English-language documentation for all therapeutic goods applications, and translated clinical trial documentation must meet National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) ethical standards. Hospital accreditation under the NSQHS Standards requires provision of translated patient information.
