Perth Translation Services » Health Medical Translation » Polish Translator
Polish Health Medical Translation
We have Polish 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 Polish translations is a specialised discipline, not all Polish translators are able to deliver translations for medical documents. Perth Translation provides medical Polish 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
Our NAATI certified translators are ready to assist. Additional effort in finding the right professional Polish 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.
Upload your documents for translation
Professional Polish Translator
Perth Translation provides professional Polish translation services. You can use the form on this page to upload multiple files for a confirm quote and delivery time. Our Polish translator is ready to assist with your translation project.
About the Polish Language
Polish is the official language of Poland and is the most widely spoken Western Slavic language and the second largest Slavic language after Russian.
Today, Polish is spoken by over 38.5 million people as their first language in Poland. Millions of Polish speakers can be found in countries such as Australia, Brazil, Canada, United Kingdom, United States, Scotland and so on. There are over 50 million Polish language speakers around the world.
Medical Translations For All Major Languages
- Arabic medical translation
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- French medical translation
- German medical translation
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- 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 Polish Language
Polish is the official language of Poland and is the most widely spoken Western Slavic language and the second largest Slavic language after Russian.
Today, Polish is spoken by over 38.5 million people as their first language in Poland. Millions of Polish speakers can be found in countries such as Australia, Brazil, Canada, United Kingdom, United States, Scotland and so on. There are over 50 million Polish language speakers around the world.
The Polish language became far more homogeneous in the second half of the 20th century, in part due to the mass migration of several million Polish citizens from the eastern to the western part of the country after the Soviet annexation of the Kresy (Eastern Borderlands) in 1939, and the annexation of former German territory after World War II. This tendency toward a homogeneity also stems from the vertically integrated nature of the Polish People's Republic.
The inhabitants of different regions of Poland still speak Polish somewhat differently, although the differences between modern-day vernacular varieties and standardized Polish appear relatively slight. First-language speakers of Polish have no trouble understanding each other, and non-native speakers may have difficulty distinguishing regional variations.
Polish is normally described as consisting of four or five main dialects:
- Greater Polish, spoken in the west
- Lesser Polish, spoken in the south and southeast
- Masovian, spoken throughout the central and eastern parts of the country
- Silesian, spoken in the southwest
Kashubian, spoken in Pomerania west of Gdańsk on the Baltic Sea, is often considered a fifth dialect. It contains a number of features not found elsewhere in Poland, e.g. nine distinct oral vowels (vs. the five of standard Polish) and (in the northern dialects) phonemic word stress, an archaic feature preserved from Common Slavic times and not found anywhere else among the West Slavic languages. However, it "lacks most of the linguistic and social determinants of language-hood".
Polish Document Translation
Standard Polish is highly uniform across Poland, and official documents show negligible dialectal variation. However, documents from the Silesia region occasionally use Silesian terminology, and historical documents from territories that were part of Germany or the Austro-Hungarian Empire before 1918 may contain German-language annotations or use Germanic administrative formats.
Polish Document Types
Key Polish civil documents include akt urodzenia (birth certificate), akt malzenstwa (marriage certificate), and swiadectwo ukonczenia (completion certificate for education).
Polish is the official language of Poland and an official language of the European Union. It is also recognised as a minority language in parts of Lithuania, the Czech Republic, and Ukraine. Polish civil registry offices (Urzad Stanu Cywilnego) issue documents in standardised national formats.
Industry Requirements
The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) registers health professionals across 16 regulated health professions. The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) regulates medicines and devices, and state health departments — including the WA Department of Health — oversee hospital and health service delivery.
Common documents requiring translation include medical reports and discharge summaries, vaccination records, pharmaceutical product information and consumer medicine information (CMI), overseas health practitioner qualifications for AHPRA registration, clinical trial documentation, patient consent forms, and mental health assessments for visa and immigration purposes.
NAATI-certified translation is mandatory for overseas health qualifications submitted to AHPRA for practitioner registration. Medical reports used in immigration health assessments must also be NAATI-certified, and TGA requires certified translation of foreign-language regulatory submissions for therapeutic goods.
Perth's health sector is centred around five major hospital campuses — Royal Perth, Fiona Stanley, Sir Charles Gairdner, Joondalup, and Midland — alongside growing private hospital networks. The city attracts internationally trained health professionals whose qualification documents require NAATI-certified translation for AHPRA registration, and patient populations in culturally diverse areas like Mirrabooka and Cannington generate demand for translated medical communications.
