Naming human diseases

Naming human diseases

International standards and resources

The World Health Organization International statistical classification of diseases and related health problems (10th edition) (ICD-10) is an authoritative source of terminology for human diseases and other medical conditions.

Australian conventions and resources

The Public Health Laboratory Network (part of the Communicable Diseases Network Australia) provides case definitions for human communicable diseases in Australia.

Formal names of human diseases often use Latin or Greek binomial terms. Basic binomial disease names consist of the name of the type of disease (eg ‘paralysis’, ‘diabetes’ [passing water]) and at least 1 other descriptor (eg ‘agitans’, ‘mellitus’). Do not italicise or capitalise any of these terms:

paralysis agitans [Parkinson disease]     diabetes mellitus

Generally, the name of choice for any disease in any language should be the common term. For international communication, the most commonly used English term is preferred. Publications should include any synonyms in the list of keywords or glossary.

Use British spellings and lower case for common names of diseases, even if the disease name is usually abbreviated to an acronym:

chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL)     chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)    human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)     type 2 diabetes

Exceptions are proper nouns and some (but not all) letters denoting type or subtype:

Japanese encephalitis     Parkinson disease     hepatitis B     Haemophilus influenzae type b disease

Reminder. Just because the abbreviation of a term is made up of capitals, it does not mean that the term has initial capitals when it is spelt out.

Use an initial capital but not a possessive s for diseases named after a person (eponymic terms):

Alzheimer disease   not   Alzheimer’s disease

Crohn disease   not   Crohn’s disease

Down syndrome   not   Down’s syndrome

For noun and derivative forms of eponymic disease names, do not use a capital letter:

Parkinson disease   but   parkinsonism

See Terms derived from proper nouns for further information on eponymic terms.

Caution! In ICD-10, disease names are written in sentence case (ie initial capital for the first word). When these names are set within a sentence, use all lower case, apart from proper nouns.

When writing about people with diseases or conditions, avoid defining the person by their disease:

person with diabetes   not   diabetic

person with epilepsy   not   epileptic

See also Using inclusive and respectful language.

 

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