Health In Spanish | Say It Right In Real Life

In Spanish, “health” is “salud,” and most daily talk sticks to plain phrases like “me siento bien/mal” and “necesito un médico.”

You can learn the word salud in one minute. Using it naturally takes a bit longer. Spanish speakers don’t talk about health the same way English speakers do, and that’s where people get stuck. They know the translation, then freeze when they want to describe a symptom, a test, a prescription, or a simple “I’m feeling off.”

This article gives you the Spanish you’ll actually say: common words, clean sentence patterns, and polite lines for clinics and pharmacies. You’ll see what sounds normal, what sounds stiff, and how to avoid awkward literal translations.

Health In Spanish

The direct translation of “health” is salud. The Real Academia Española lists salud as the state in which a living being functions normally, plus related senses tied to condition and well-being. You can check the entry at the RAE definition of “salud” to see how the word is framed in standard Spanish.

In day-to-day talk, you’ll hear salud most in short, familiar lines:

  • ¿Cómo está tu salud? (How’s your health?)
  • Mi salud está bien. (My health is fine.)
  • Por mi salud… (For my health…)
  • Brindo por tu salud. (A toast: “To your health.”)

Still, Spanish often prefers “I feel…” lines over abstract “health” talk. So you’ll use salud, then switch to feeling-based verbs when you describe what’s going on.

Talking About Health In Spanish With Natural Patterns

If you want to sound like a real person, start with a few patterns and reuse them. Spanish rewards simple structures you can repeat without thinking.

Pattern 1: “Me siento…” for how you feel

This is the workhorse. Use it for mood, pain level, energy, nausea, and “something’s not right” feelings.

  • Me siento bien. (I feel good.)
  • Me siento mal. (I feel bad.)
  • Me siento cansado/cansada. (I feel tired.)
  • Me siento mareado/mareada. (I feel dizzy.)
  • Me siento débil. (I feel weak.)

Tip: many adjectives change with gender. Cansado (masc.) / cansada (fem.). If you’d rather skip that in a hurry, pick adjectives that don’t change, like bien, mal, débil.

Pattern 2: “Me duele / me duelen…” for pain

Spanish flips the structure: “It hurts to me.” Use me duele for one thing, me duelen for plural.

  • Me duele la cabeza. (My head hurts.)
  • Me duele el estómago. (My stomach hurts.)
  • Me duelen las rodillas. (My knees hurt.)
  • Me duele aquí. (It hurts here.)

Want to be more precise? Add time and intensity:

  • Me duele desde ayer. (It’s hurt since yesterday.)
  • Me duele mucho / un poco. (It hurts a lot / a little.)
  • Me duele al respirar. (It hurts when I breathe.)

Pattern 3: “Tengo…” for symptoms and conditions

Tener (“to have”) is common for symptoms. Use it when Spanish treats the issue like something you “have,” not something you “are.”

  • Tengo fiebre. (I have a fever.)
  • Tengo tos. (I have a cough.)
  • Tengo náuseas. (I have nausea.)
  • Tengo alergia a… (I’m allergic to…)

If you’re not sure which pattern fits, default to me siento (feeling) or me duele (pain). They cover a lot with minimal grammar stress.

Core Vocabulary You’ll Reuse A Lot

Some words show up in almost every medical chat. Learn them once, then you’ll keep seeing them on forms, signs, and instructions.

People, places, and paperwork

  • el médico / la médica (doctor)
  • la enfermera / el enfermero (nurse)
  • la farmacia (pharmacy)
  • la clínica (clinic)
  • la cita (appointment)
  • el seguro (insurance)
  • el formulario (form)

Tests, results, and treatment words

  • el análisis (lab test)
  • los resultados (results)
  • la receta (prescription)
  • el medicamento (medication)
  • la dosis (dose)
  • los efectos secundarios (side effects)

If you want a trusted place to double-check medical terms in Spanish, MedlinePlus en español’s medical encyclopedia is a solid option for plain-language explanations and spelling.

Words That Trip People Up

Some English words have Spanish “twins” that look familiar but land differently in real speech. Here are a few that cause mix-ups.

“Constipated” vs. “constipado”

In many places, constipado often means you have a cold. If you mean constipation, you’ll usually say estreñido/estreñida or tengo estreñimiento.

“Intoxicated” vs. “intoxicado”

Intoxicado often points to poisoning or a bad reaction, not being drunk. If you mean alcohol intoxication, people may say borracho/borracha (drunk) or use a clinical phrasing in medical settings.

“Sensible” vs. “sensible”

Spanish sensible usually means “sensitive,” not “reasonable.” So “my stomach is sensitive” can be tengo el estómago sensible.

When you’re unsure, keep it plain. You can always add a simple clarifier: “Me refiero a…” (I mean…).

Useful Phrases For Clinics And Pharmacies

These lines cover the usual flow: checking in, explaining what’s wrong, and getting next steps. You don’t need perfect grammar. You need clarity.

Check-in and basic info

  • Tengo una cita. (I have an appointment.)
  • Vengo sin cita. (I’m here without an appointment.)
  • Es mi primera vez aquí. (It’s my first time here.)
  • No hablo mucho español. (I don’t speak much Spanish.)
  • ¿Habla inglés? (Do you speak English?)

Describing what’s going on

  • Me duele aquí. (It hurts here.)
  • Me empezó hace dos días. (It started two days ago.)
  • Me pasa a veces. (It happens sometimes.)
  • Me cuesta respirar. (It’s hard for me to breathe.)
  • Tengo fiebre y tos. (I have fever and cough.)

Questions that help you stay in control

  • ¿Qué cree que tengo? (What do you think I have?)
  • ¿Qué debo hacer? (What should I do?)
  • ¿Es grave? (Is it serious?)
  • ¿Cuándo debo volver? (When should I come back?)
  • ¿Puede repetir, por favor? (Can you repeat, please?)

If a doctor uses a term you don’t know, you can ask for a simpler line without sounding rude:

  • ¿Puede decirlo con palabras más sencillas? (Can you say it with simpler words?)
  • ¿Qué significa esa palabra? (What does that word mean?)

Common Health Words And Phrases In Spanish

These are the building blocks you’ll reuse in daily talk and in appointments. Learn them in small sets, then practice with your own details (your body part, your timeline, your meds).

Spanish English When You’d Use It
salud health General topic, forms, toasts, broad questions
me siento bien / mal I feel good / bad Quick status update when someone asks how you are
me duele… …hurts Pain in a specific place
tengo fiebre / tos I have fever / cough Classic symptom reporting
alergia allergy Food, medicine, seasonal allergies
receta prescription Pharmacy pickup, doctor’s instructions
medicamento medication Anything you take as treatment
dosis dose How much, how often, how long
síntomas symptoms Describing what you notice and feel
efectos secundarios side effects New issues after starting a medicine
análisis lab test Blood work, urine tests, lab panels

How To Sound Polite Without Getting Wordy

Politeness in Spanish doesn’t require long speeches. A few small pieces do most of the work, and they fit in any setting.

Use “por favor” and “gracias” like punctuation

Por favor (please) and gracias (thank you) smooth out direct lines. It’s normal to repeat them.

Pick the polite “usted” form when you’re unsure

With staff you don’t know, usted is a safe default. You don’t need to master full conjugation to benefit from it. You can keep your sentences in question form:

  • ¿Puede ayudarme? (Can you help me?)
  • ¿Puede escribirlo? (Can you write it down?)
  • ¿Puede hablar más despacio? (Can you speak more slowly?)

Ask for the plan in two steps

This keeps you clear on what to do next:

  • ¿Qué tengo que hacer hoy? (What do I have to do today?)
  • ¿Qué tengo que hacer en casa? (What do I have to do at home?)

Doctor Visit Spanish: Symptoms, Tests, And Instructions

When you’re sick, you don’t want to hunt for words. These lines cover the typical questions you’ll hear, plus answers you can adapt fast.

Time and frequency

  • Empezó hoy / ayer / hace tres días. (It started today / yesterday / three days ago.)
  • Me pasa todos los días. (It happens every day.)
  • Me pasa por la noche. (It happens at night.)
  • Va y viene. (It comes and goes.)

Severity and changes

  • Está peor que antes. (It’s worse than before.)
  • Está mejor que ayer. (It’s better than yesterday.)
  • Es un dolor fuerte / leve. (It’s strong / mild pain.)

Common instructions you’ll hear

Even if you don’t catch every word, you can recognize these core verbs:

  • tome (take) — Tome esto dos veces al día.
  • evite (avoid) — Evite el alcohol.
  • descanse (rest) — Descanse unos días.
  • beba (drink) — Beba más agua.

If you’re reading Spanish medical pages and want consistent terminology across countries, the World Health Organization keeps standards and classification terms used in health data and documentation. Their Spanish overview is here: WHO classifications and terminology (Spanish).

Ready-Made Lines You Can Swap In Seconds

This table is meant for quick practice. Read the Spanish out loud, then swap the details: the body part, the timeline, the trigger, the medication name.

Spanish English Swap This Part
Me duele la ____. My ____ hurts. cabeza, garganta, espalda, pierna
Tengo ____ desde hace ____. I’ve had ____ for ____. tos / fiebre / náuseas + tiempo
Soy alérgico/alérgica a ____. I’m allergic to ____. penicilina, mariscos, nueces
Estoy tomando ____. I’m taking ____. nombre del medicamento
¿Qué significa “____”? What does “____” mean? palabra nueva del médico
¿Puede escribirlo, por favor? Can you write it down, please?
¿Cuándo debo volver? When should I come back?

When You Need The Right Term Fast

Sometimes you need the exact word for a diagnosis, a procedure, or a medication category. In those moments, it helps to use a medical term dictionary built for Spanish. The Diccionario panhispánico de términos médicos is maintained by Spanish-language medical academies and is designed to standardize medical vocabulary across Spanish-speaking regions.

For patient-friendly explanations with careful wording, MedlinePlus en español is also a steady reference, especially when you want to understand what a term means in plain language before you try to say it out loud. If you’re learning, you can use it in two steps: read the Spanish section first, then read the English version of the same topic to confirm you got the idea.

Small Practice Routine That Sticks

You don’t need hours. You need repetition that feels real. Here’s a low-effort routine you can run in ten minutes.

Step 1: Pick one pattern and one body part

Say five lines with me duele. Keep it simple:

  • Me duele la cabeza.
  • Me duele la garganta.
  • Me duele la espalda.
  • Me duele el estómago.
  • Me duele aquí.

Step 2: Add time

Take one line and add a timeline:

  • Me duele la cabeza desde ayer.
  • Me duele el estómago desde la mañana.

Step 3: Add one question

This turns practice into something you can use in a real visit:

  • ¿Qué debo hacer?
  • ¿Necesito un análisis?

That’s it. Short, repeatable, and close to real life. Over time, you’ll stop translating in your head and start speaking in patterns.

References & Sources