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发布时间:2020-12-02 08:25  点击:

世联翻译公司完成字幕英文翻译
 
01:09-01:19 It should be used as an introduction on how to assess and treat child with wheeze. It is intended to complement practical clinical experience.
01:20-01:30 We will look at this in three sections:
Assessment,
Treatment,
Response to treatment
For an acute episode of wheeze
01:31-01:40 For guidelines on the management of children with chronic wheeze, refer to the pocket book of Hospital Care for Children.
01:41-01:59 The video illustrates children with wheeze, shows the recommended equipment for their assessment and treatment. In particular, it deals with the correct use of meter-dose inhaler with a spacer devise and correct use of the nebulizer.
02:00-02:12 It is important to be able to assess a child with acute wheeze accurately so that correct decisions for treatment can be taken.
02:13-02:19 The Assessment of Wheeze
02:20-02:34 When a child is brought to you with cough or difficult breathing, you should examine the child to determine whether wheeze is present. The clinical signs of wheeze include
The wheeze sound on expiration
02:35-02:45 Before disturbing the child, listen to the child’s breathing. You would probably have to put your ear close to the child’s mouth or use a stethoscope to hear the sound clearly.
02:46-02:57 Listen to the sound as these children breathe out. The wheeze sound is often described as a musical sound made as the child breathes out.
02:58-03:48 Notice that wheeze is whispered as the child breathes out, but the actual character of the wheeze sound can vary from child to child.
03:49-04:13 Let’s look and listen again.
04:14-04:49 In addition to the wheeze,you may have observed the following features, look closely at the child’s chest, the child may be taking longer to breathe out and then breathe in. A child with wheeze may also have chest indrawing. The child may have to make an effort to breathe out.This may result in respiratory stress. With a child in obvious discomfort, and experiencing difficulty in talking, drinking, or breast feeding. In order to observe the additional signs, you must look carefully.
 
 
04:50-04:58 You should not expect to see or hear all of these signs in every child with wheeze.
04:59-05:48 Watch this child: which of the signs of wheeze do you recognize in this child?
05:49-06:08 These are the signs we recognized: we heard the sound on expiration; longer to breathe out than to breathe in; chest indrawing; and making an effort to breathe out.You may need to wait until the child is relaxed to look and listen for wheeze.
06:09-06:40 The commonest causes of wheeze in young children in developing countries are acute respiratory infections, such as cough, and cold and bronchoalveolitis and pneumonia and asthma.
06:41-06:51 Since pneumonia is a major cause of death in young children in most developing countries, it is particularly important  always to consider this diagnosis in children with wheeze.
06:52-07:05 Having examined the child presenting with cough or difficult breathing, and recognized the child has wheeze, decide upon the correct treatment for that child.
07:06-07:19 Wheeze is caused by narrowed air passages. In most children, this is due to the inflammation of the air ways, and spasm in the muscles in the walls of the air ways.
07:20-07:34 The spasm should respond to the treatment with a bronchodilator. A bronchodilator is a drug that helps these children breathe more easily by opening the air passages of the lungs, and relaxing the bronchospasm.  
07:35-07:41  And an essential step in the assessment of children with wheeze is to look at the response to bronchodilator treatment.
07:42-07:53 It is important that small hospitals have not only oral salbutamol for the treatment of mild wheeze, but also a rapid acting bronchodilator available.
07:54-08:03 Rapid acting bronchodilators produce a response within 15 minutes, allowing you to make an assessment of the child’s wheeze within a short time.
08:04-08:23 They are particularly useful in treating children with severe wheeze and helping to decide the cause of the wheeze. Those who respond to bronchodilator treatment are likely to have asthma, whereas those who do not are more likely to have pneumonia or bronchoalveolitis.
08:24-08:44 It is therefore important that rapid acting bronchodilators be available in health centers,  small hospitals, and the right equipment be available to use them properly and that doctors and nurses and other health workers are trained to administer them correctly.
08:45-08:54 Rapid acting bronchodilator treatment methods
08:55-09:08 There are three methods of giving treatment with rapid acting bronchodilators for the assessment and treatment of wheeze that are recommended for use in health centers and small hospitals. These are:
09:09-09:22 The inhalation of salbutamol aerosol or mist using a meter-dosing inhaler or a nebulizer or through the injection of epinephrine, also known as adrenalin.
09:23-09:32 In most circumstances, inhalation using an aerosol is the most effective and safest method of delivery.
09:33-09:38 Aerosol delivery
09:39-09:59 The two methods of aerosol delivery currently available are meter-dose inhalation and nebulization. An additional method used by adults and older children: dry powder inhalation:is ineffective for most infants and young children, therefore will not be discussed in this video.
10:00-10:09 The meter-dose inhaler when used with a spacer devise, and nebulizer have both shown themselves to be effective treatment methods in young children.
10:10-10:15 Metered Dose Inhalers Using a Spacer Device
10:16-10:34 Most children under seven or eight years of age will be unable to use metered dose inhaler effectively when they are wheezing, this is because they are not able to time everything correctly to breathe in the salbutamol aerosol when it is delivered by the metered dose inhaler.
10:35-10:44 However, metered dose inhaler can be successfully modified for use by infants and young children with addition of a spacer devise.
10:45-11:06 The jet of spray provided by the metered dose inhaler is trapped in the spacer chamber, the propellants and evaporates leaving only the bronchodilator particles. The small particles are more likely to reach deep into the child’s airways and so be more effective than leaving the ways.
11:07-11:33 The metered dose inhaler is placed into the end of the spacer devise, the inhaler is depressed twice to generate two puffs.The child is instructed to take five full breaths with the mouth closed around the mouthpiece. The spacer devise creates a reservoir of spray for the child to breathe.It removes the need for the child to breathe in at the moment the inhaler is depressed.
11:34-11:45 A spacer devise with a mask can be used with young children who cannot use a mouthpiece. If commercially manufactured spacer devise is not available, it is quite simple to make your own.
11:46-12:06 Very effective spacer devises can be easily made from half or one litre plastic bottles. However, plastic spacer devises can build up electric static charge. The charge causes salbutamol to stick to the plastic spacer devise reducing the amount available to the child.
12:07-12:21 Washing the spacer devise in household  detergent solution or soap before use can stop this occurring. This simple measure can substantially improve the effectiveness of this treatment.
12:22-12:34 To make a spacer devise from a plastic bottle, use a pair of scissors or a sharp knife,  to carefully cut out a shape similar in outline to the mouthpiece of the inhaler.
12:35-13:00 The spacer devise[C1]  is then pushed into the hole you have created. The open end of the bottle is placed into the child’s mouth. The first time you use a homemade spacer devise, use three to four puffs, afterwards you only need two puffs. After this the child breathes in and out for thirty seconds. 
13:01-13:04 The Nebulizer
13:05-14:00 The nebulizer consists of a container into which a liquid mixture of salbutamol and water is placed.  The salbutamol and water is placed here. A flow of six to eight litres per minute of oxygen or compressed air is then introduced here into the pipe which runs up to the center of the nebulizer. The flow of the oxygen or air into the nebulizer draws the salbutamol and water up the outer section of the central pipe. When it reaches the top of the pipe, it meets the oxygen or air here, the oxygen or air breaks up the salbutamol and water against this section of the nebulizer and turns it into a fine mist. The mist is then forced by the flow of oxygen or air out of the top section of the nebulizer, the child then inhales the mist.
14:01--14:37 It is important that the nebulizer is filled and used correctly.Unscrew the top of the plastic nebulizer, and add the salbutamol solution, 0.5 milliliters of liquid salbutamol should be used for children under five years. Add 2 milliliters of normal saline or sterile water, if normal saline or sterile water is not available, drinking water should be used after it has been strained with a cloth, boiled for twenty minutes, and cooled.
14:38-14:58 Do not overfill the nebulizer. Attach one end of the tubing to the bottom of the nebulizer and the other to an oxygen supply with a flow of six to eight litres per minute or an electric air compressor, if available, a mask or TPS  may be used.  
14:59-15:17 The child should be treated until the liquid in the nebulizer has been nearly used up.   This usually takes about ten minutes. It is not necessary to nebulize until all the liquid has been used. In practice about 0.5 milliliters  will be left in the nebulizer bowl. 
15:18-15:29 You can tell when this point is reached as splattering sound will occur, and at this stage, little of the residual fluid is being nebulized.
15:30-15:46 After each use, wash the mask the tubing and the nebulizer with dish-washing detergent or soap and dry thoroughly. Do not boil or steam clean the tubing or nebulizer, as this may damage them.
15:47-15:50 Subcutaneous epinephrine (adrenaline)
15:51-16:06 Subcutaneous epinephrine, which is also known as adrenaline, is given to young children by subcutaneous injection. It is also a rapid acting bronchodilator, which will act in about 15 minutes.
16:07-16:30 Great care needs to be taken when administering epinephrine.  It is vital to check that correct strain of solution is used. 1 : 1000 dilution should be used and
0.1 ml per kg of body weight
A one-ml syringe should be used. And the dose measured very carefully.
 
   
16:31-16:40 Follow up treatment
16:41-16:57 Reassess the child after 15 minutes. A child with the first episode of wheezing and no respiratory stress after nebulization can usually be managed at home with oral salbutamol and supportive care only.
16:58-17:14 If the child is still in respiratory stress,or has recurrent wheezing, give salbutamol by metered-doze inhaler or by nebulizer.  If salbutamol is not available, give the child subcutaneous epinephrine.
17:15-17:38 Reassess the child after another 15 minutes to determine subsequent treatment. If respiratory stress has been resolved, and the child has not fast breathing, advise the mother on home care with oral salbutamol syrup or tablets. If the respiratory stress persists, admit the child in the hospital for treatment.
17:39-17:47 If the child has central cyanosis, or unable to drink, the child should be admitted in the hospital for treatment.
17:48-18:08 In children admitted to hospital, give oxygen, a rapid acting bronchodilator, or a first dose of oral prednisolone or another steroid.
The child should be given
1 milligram of oral prednisolone for every kilogram of weight once a day for 3 days.
18:09-18:21 A positive response should be seen within thirty minutes. If this does not occur, give rapid acting bronchodilator at up to one hourly intervals
18:22-18:54 If there is no improvement after three doses of rapid acting bronchodilator, plus oral prednisolone, give IV aminophylline. Intravenous aminophylline can be dangerous in overdose or when given too rapidly. 
Weigh the child
And give the IV dose over at least 20 minutes.
Give
Initial dose 5-6 mgs/kg
(up to a maximum of 300 mg)
18:54-19:24 This is followed by a maintenance dose of 5 mg/kg every 6 hours.
Administer the initial dose, if the child has received any form of aminophylline in the previous 24 hours.  Stop giving intravenous aminophylline immediately if the child:
Starts to vomit
Has a pulse rate of greater than 180 per minute
Develops a headache
Has a convulsion
 
 
 
 
19:25-19:49 All the techniques shown in the video have a role in the management of wheeze in young children. In terms of easy administering, availability and cost, metered-dose inhaler with spacer devises may be the most appropriate method for administering rapid acting bronchodilator to young children with wheeze in our patient facilities.
19:50-20:10 However, in making your choice ,you must consider any local factor, which may influence your decision.Implementing the recommended procedures in this video will allow the correct treatment of wheeze in children with cough and difficult breathing.
20:11-20:23 This is an essential element in the management of children with acute respiratory infection and acute wheeze. Further information is contained in the pocket book Hospital Care for Children.
20:24-20:40 And the technical review paper Bronchodilators and Other Medications for the treatment of wheeze-associated illnesses in young children prepared by the WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Department of Child and Adolescent Health Development.
20:41-21:23 Narrated by
Maggie Mash
This video was produced by the world health organization Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Development, with assistance from
Dr. Janet Cumberland,
Sheffield Children’s Hospital
Sheffield UK
Hamish Simpson, Professor
David Thomas, Research Fellow
University Department of Child Health
Leicester, UK
And with the help and support of the staff and patients of
Al Anfushi Children’s Hospital
Alexandria Egypt
 
Childrens Hospital Bangkok
Thailand
 
El Chatby Hospital
Egypt
 
Leicester Royal Infirmary
Leicester UK
 
Sheffield Children’s Hospital
Sheffield UK
 
Directed by
Chris Dent
 
Produced by
World Health Organization
 
 
 
 
 

怀疑这里视频出错,应该是将吸入器插入储存腔(塑料瓶)所切开的口子里。
01:09-01:19 It should be used as an introduction on how to assess and treat child with wheeze. It is intended to complement practical clinical experience.
01:20-01:30 We will look at this in three sections:
Assessment,
Treatment,
Response to treatment
For an acute episode of wheeze
01:31-01:40 For guidelines on the management of children with chronic wheeze, refer to the pocket book of Hospital Care for Children.
01:41-01:59 The video illustrates children with wheeze, shows the recommended equipment for their assessment and treatment. In particular, it deals with the correct use of meter-dose inhaler with a spacer devise and correct use of the nebulizer.
02:00-02:12 It is important to be able to assess a child with acute wheeze accurately so that correct decisions for treatment can be taken.
02:13-02:19 The Assessment of Wheeze
02:20-02:34 When a child is brought to you with cough or difficult breathing, you should examine the child to determine whether wheeze is present. The clinical signs of wheeze include
The wheeze sound on expiration
02:35-02:45 Before disturbing the child, listen to the child’s breathing. You would probably have to put your ear close to the child’s mouth or use a stethoscope to hear the sound clearly.
02:46-02:57 Listen to the sound as these children breathe out. The wheeze sound is often described as a musical sound made as the child breathes out.
02:58-03:48 Notice that wheeze is whispered as the child breathes out, but the actual character of the wheeze sound can vary from child to child.
03:49-04:13 Let’s look and listen again.
04:14-04:49 In addition to the wheeze,you may have observed the following features, look closely at the child’s chest, the child may be taking longer to breathe out and then breathe in. A child with wheeze may also have chest indrawing. The child may have to make an effort to breathe out.This may result in respiratory stress. With a child in obvious discomfort, and experiencing difficulty in talking, drinking, or breast feeding. In order to observe the additional signs, you must look carefully.
 
 
04:50-04:58 You should not expect to see or hear all of these signs in every child with wheeze.
04:59-05:48 Watch this child: which of the signs of wheeze do you recognize in this child?
05:49-06:08 These are the signs we recognized: we heard the sound on expiration; longer to breathe out than to breathe in; chest indrawing; and making an effort to breathe out.You may need to wait until the child is relaxed to look and listen for wheeze.
06:09-06:40 The commonest causes of wheeze in young children in developing countries are acute respiratory infections, such as cough, and cold and bronchoalveolitis and pneumonia and asthma.
06:41-06:51 Since pneumonia is a major cause of death in young children in most developing countries, it is particularly important  always to consider this diagnosis in children with wheeze.
06:52-07:05 Having examined the child presenting with cough or difficult breathing, and recognized the child has wheeze, decide upon the correct treatment for that child.
07:06-07:19 Wheeze is caused by narrowed air passages. In most children, this is due to the inflammation of the air ways, and spasm in the muscles in the walls of the air ways.
07:20-07:34 The spasm should respond to the treatment with a bronchodilator. A bronchodilator is a drug that helps these children breathe more easily by opening the air passages of the lungs, and relaxing the bronchospasm.  
07:35-07:41  And an essential step in the assessment of children with wheeze is to look at the response to bronchodilator treatment.
07:42-07:53 It is important that small hospitals have not only oral salbutamol for the treatment of mild wheeze, but also a rapid acting bronchodilator available.
07:54-08:03 Rapid acting bronchodilators produce a response within 15 minutes, allowing you to make an assessment of the child’s wheeze within a short time.
08:04-08:23 They are particularly useful in treating children with severe wheeze and helping to decide the cause of the wheeze. Those who respond to bronchodilator treatment are likely to have asthma, whereas those who do not are more likely to have pneumonia or bronchoalveolitis.
08:24-08:44 It is therefore important that rapid acting bronchodilators be available in health centers,  small hospitals, and the right equipment be available to use them properly and that doctors and nurses and other health workers are trained to administer them correctly.
08:45-08:54 Rapid acting bronchodilator treatment methods
08:55-09:08 There are three methods of giving treatment with rapid acting bronchodilators for the assessment and treatment of wheeze that are recommended for use in health centers and small hospitals. These are:
09:09-09:22 The inhalation of salbutamol aerosol or mist using a meter-dosing inhaler or a nebulizer or through the injection of epinephrine, also known as adrenalin.
09:23-09:32 In most circumstances, inhalation using an aerosol is the most effective and safest method of delivery.
09:33-09:38 Aerosol delivery
09:39-09:59 The two methods of aerosol delivery currently available are meter-dose inhalation and nebulization. An additional method used by adults and older children: dry powder inhalation:is ineffective for most infants and young children, therefore will not be discussed in this video.
10:00-10:09 The meter-dose inhaler when used with a spacer devise, and nebulizer have both shown themselves to be effective treatment methods in young children.
10:10-10:15 Metered Dose Inhalers Using a Spacer Device
10:16-10:34 Most children under seven or eight years of age will be unable to use metered dose inhaler effectively when they are wheezing, this is because they are not able to time everything correctly to breathe in the salbutamol aerosol when it is delivered by the metered dose inhaler.
10:35-10:44 However, metered dose inhaler can be successfully modified for use by infants and young children with addition of a spacer devise.
10:45-11:06 The jet of spray provided by the metered dose inhaler is trapped in the spacer chamber, the propellants and evaporates leaving only the bronchodilator particles. The small particles are more likely to reach deep into the child’s airways and so be more effective than leaving the ways.
11:07-11:33 The metered dose inhaler is placed into the end of the spacer devise, the inhaler is depressed twice to generate two puffs.The child is instructed to take five full breaths with the mouth closed around the mouthpiece. The spacer devise creates a reservoir of spray for the child to breathe.It removes the need for the child to breathe in at the moment the inhaler is depressed.
11:34-11:45 A spacer devise with a mask can be used with young children who cannot use a mouthpiece. If commercially manufactured spacer devise is not available, it is quite simple to make your own.
11:46-12:06 Very effective spacer devises can be easily made from half or one litre plastic bottles. However, plastic spacer devises can build up electric static charge. The charge causes salbutamol to stick to the plastic spacer devise reducing the amount available to the child.
12:07-12:21 Washing the spacer devise in household  detergent solution or soap before use can stop this occurring. This simple measure can substantially improve the effectiveness of this treatment.
12:22-12:34 To make a spacer devise from a plastic bottle, use a pair of scissors or a sharp knife,  to carefully cut out a shape similar in outline to the mouthpiece of the inhaler.
12:35-13:00 The spacer devise[C1]  is then pushed into the hole you have created. The open end of the bottle is placed into the child’s mouth. The first time you use a homemade spacer devise, use three to four puffs, afterwards you only need two puffs. After this the child breathes in and out for thirty seconds. 
13:01-13:04 The Nebulizer
13:05-14:00 The nebulizer consists of a container into which a liquid mixture of salbutamol and water is placed.  The salbutamol and water is placed here. A flow of six to eight litres per minute of oxygen or compressed air is then introduced here into the pipe which runs up to the center of the nebulizer. The flow of the oxygen or air into the nebulizer draws the salbutamol and water up the outer section of the central pipe. When it reaches the top of the pipe, it meets the oxygen or air here, the oxygen or air breaks up the salbutamol and water against this section of the nebulizer and turns it into a fine mist. The mist is then forced by the flow of oxygen or air out of the top section of the nebulizer, the child then inhales the mist.
14:01--14:37 It is important that the nebulizer is filled and used correctly.Unscrew the top of the plastic nebulizer, and add the salbutamol solution, 0.5 milliliters of liquid salbutamol should be used for children under five years. Add 2 milliliters of normal saline or sterile water, if normal saline or sterile water is not available, drinking water should be used after it has been strained with a cloth, boiled for twenty minutes, and cooled.
14:38-14:58 Do not overfill the nebulizer. Attach one end of the tubing to the bottom of the nebulizer and the other to an oxygen supply with a flow of six to eight litres per minute or an electric air compressor, if available, a mask or TPS  may be used.  
14:59-15:17 The child should be treated until the liquid in the nebulizer has been nearly used up.   This usually takes about ten minutes. It is not necessary to nebulize until all the liquid has been used. In practice about 0.5 milliliters  will be left in the nebulizer bowl. 
15:18-15:29 You can tell when this point is reached as splattering sound will occur, and at this stage, little of the residual fluid is being nebulized.
15:30-15:46 After each use, wash the mask the tubing and the nebulizer with dish-washing detergent or soap and dry thoroughly. Do not boil or steam clean the tubing or nebulizer, as this may damage them.
15:47-15:50 Subcutaneous epinephrine (adrenaline)
15:51-16:06 Subcutaneous epinephrine, which is also known as adrenaline, is given to young children by subcutaneous injection. It is also a rapid acting bronchodilator, which will act in about 15 minutes.
16:07-16:30 Great care needs to be taken when administering epinephrine.  It is vital to check that correct strain of solution is used. 1 : 1000 dilution should be used and
0.1 ml per kg of body weight
A one-ml syringe should be used. And the dose measured very carefully.
 
   
16:31-16:40 Follow up treatment
16:41-16:57 Reassess the child after 15 minutes. A child with the first episode of wheezing and no respiratory stress after nebulization can usually be managed at home with oral salbutamol and supportive care only.
16:58-17:14 If the child is still in respiratory stress,or has recurrent wheezing, give salbutamol by metered-doze inhaler or by nebulizer.  If salbutamol is not available, give the child subcutaneous epinephrine.
17:15-17:38 Reassess the child after another 15 minutes to determine subsequent treatment. If respiratory stress has been resolved, and the child has not fast breathing, advise the mother on home care with oral salbutamol syrup or tablets. If the respiratory stress persists, admit the child in the hospital for treatment.
17:39-17:47 If the child has central cyanosis, or unable to drink, the child should be admitted in the hospital for treatment.
17:48-18:08 In children admitted to hospital, give oxygen, a rapid acting bronchodilator, or a first dose of oral prednisolone or another steroid.
The child should be given
1 milligram of oral prednisolone for every kilogram of weight once a day for 3 days.
18:09-18:21 A positive response should be seen within thirty minutes. If this does not occur, give rapid acting bronchodilator at up to one hourly intervals
18:22-18:54 If there is no improvement after three doses of rapid acting bronchodilator, plus oral prednisolone, give IV aminophylline. Intravenous aminophylline can be dangerous in overdose or when given too rapidly. 
Weigh the child
And give the IV dose over at least 20 minutes.
Give
Initial dose 5-6 mgs/kg
(up to a maximum of 300 mg)
18:54-19:24 This is followed by a maintenance dose of 5 mg/kg every 6 hours.
Administer the initial dose, if the child has received any form of aminophylline in the previous 24 hours.  Stop giving intravenous aminophylline immediately if the child:
Starts to vomit
Has a pulse rate of greater than 180 per minute
Develops a headache
Has a convulsion
 
 
 
 
19:25-19:49 All the techniques shown in the video have a role in the management of wheeze in young children. In terms of easy administering, availability and cost, metered-dose inhaler with spacer devises may be the most appropriate method for administering rapid acting bronchodilator to young children with wheeze in our patient facilities.
19:50-20:10 However, in making your choice ,you must consider any local factor, which may influence your decision.Implementing the recommended procedures in this video will allow the correct treatment of wheeze in children with cough and difficult breathing.
20:11-20:23 This is an essential element in the management of children with acute respiratory infection and acute wheeze. Further information is contained in the pocket book Hospital Care for Children.
20:24-20:40 And the technical review paper Bronchodilators and Other Medications for the treatment of wheeze-associated illnesses in young children prepared by the WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Department of Child and Adolescent Health Development.
20:41-21:23 Narrated by
Maggie Mash
This video was produced by the world health organization Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Development, with assistance from
Dr. Janet Cumberland,
Sheffield Children’s Hospital
Sheffield UK
Hamish Simpson, Professor
David Thomas, Research Fellow
University Department of Child Health
Leicester, UK
And with the help and support of the staff and patients of
Al Anfushi Children’s Hospital
Alexandria Egypt
 
Childrens Hospital Bangkok
Thailand
 
El Chatby Hospital
Egypt
 
Leicester Royal Infirmary
Leicester UK
 
Sheffield Children’s Hospital
Sheffield UK
 
Directed by
Chris Dent
 
Produced by
World Health Organization
 
 
 
 
 
 

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  • “我公司是一家荷兰驻华分公司,主要致力于行为学研究软件、仪器和集成系统的开发和销售工作,所需翻译的英文说明书专业性强,翻译难度较大,贵司总能提供优质的服务。”

    诺达思(北京)信息技术有限责任公司

  • “为我司在东南亚地区的业务开拓提供小语种翻译服务中,翻译稿件格式美观整洁,能最大程度的还原原文的样式,同时翻译质量和速度也得到我司的肯定和好评!”

    上海大众

  • “在此之前,我们公司和其他翻译公司有过合作,但是翻译质量实在不敢恭维,所以当我认识刘颖洁以后,对她的专业性和贵公司翻译的质量非常满意,随即签署了长期合作合同。”

    银泰资源股份有限公司

  • “我行自2017年与世联翻译合作,合作过程中十分愉快。特别感谢Jasmine Liu, 态度热情亲切,有耐心,对我行提出的要求落实到位,体现了非常高的专业性。”

    南洋商业银行

  • “与我公司对接的世联翻译客服经理,可以及时对我们的要求进行反馈,也会尽量满足我们临时紧急的文件翻译要求。热情周到的服务给我们留下深刻印象!”

    黑龙江飞鹤乳业有限公司

  • “翻译金融行业文件各式各样版式复杂,试译多家翻译公司,后经过比价、比服务、比质量等流程下来,最终敲定了世联翻译。非常感谢你们提供的优质服务。”

    国金证券股份有限公司

  • “我司所需翻译的资料专业性强,涉及面广,翻译难度大,贵司总能提供优质的服务。在一次业主单位对完工资料质量的抽查中,我司因为俄文翻译质量过关而受到了好评。”

    中辰汇通科技有限责任公司

  • “我司在2014年与贵公司建立合作关系,贵公司的翻译服务质量高、速度快、态度好,赢得了我司各部门的一致好评。贵司经理工作认真踏实,特此致以诚挚的感谢!”

    新华联国际置地(马来西亚)有限公司

  • “我们需要的翻译人员,不论是笔译还是口译,都需要具有很强的专业性,贵公司的德文翻译稿件和现场的同声传译都得到了我公司和合作伙伴的充分肯定。”

    西马远东医疗投资管理有限公司

  • “在这5年中,世联翻译公司人员对工作的认真、负责、热情、周到深深的打动了我。不仅译件质量好,交稿时间及时,还能在我司资金周转紧张时给予体谅。”

    华润万东医疗装备股份有限公司

  • “我公司与世联翻译一直保持着长期合作关系,这家公司报价合理,质量可靠,效率又高。他们翻译的译文发到国外公司,对方也很认可。”

    北京世博达科技发展有限公司

  • “贵公司翻译的译文质量很高,语言表达流畅、排版格式规范、专业术语翻译到位、翻译的速度非常快、后期服务热情。我司翻译了大量的专业文件,经过长久合作,名副其实,值得信赖。”

    北京塞特雷特科技有限公司

  • “针对我们农业科研论文写作要求,尽量寻找专业对口的专家为我提供翻译服务,最后又按照学术期刊的要求,提供润色原稿和相关的证明文件。非常感谢世联翻译公司!”

    中国农科院

  • “世联的客服经理态度热情亲切,对我们提出的要求都落实到位,回答我们的问题也非常有耐心。译员十分专业,工作尽职尽责,获得与其共事的公司总部同事们的一致高度认可。”

    格莱姆公司

  • “我公司与马来西亚政府有相关业务往来,急需翻译项目报备材料。在经过对各个翻译公司的服务水平和质量的权衡下,我们选择了世联翻译公司。翻译很成功,公司领导非常满意。”

    北京韬盛科技发展有限公司

  • “客服经理能一贯热情负责的完成每一次翻译工作的组织及沟通。为客户与译员之间搭起顺畅的沟通桥梁。能协助我方建立专业词库,并向译员准确传达落实,准确及高效的完成统一风格。”

    HEURTEY PETROCHEM法国赫锑石化

  • “贵公司与我社对翻译项目进行了几次详细的会谈,期间公司负责人和廖小姐还亲自来我社拜访,对待工作热情,专业度高,我们双方达成了很好的共识。对贵公司的服务给予好评!”

    东华大学出版社

  • “非常感谢世联翻译!我们对此次缅甸语访谈翻译项目非常满意,世联在充分了解我司项目的翻译意图情况下,即高效又保质地完成了译文。”

    上海奥美广告有限公司

  • “在合作过程中,世联翻译保质、保量、及时的完成我们交给的翻译工作。客户经理工作积极,服务热情、周到,能全面的了解客户的需求,在此表示特别的感谢。”

    北京中唐电工程咨询有限公司

  • “我们通过图书翻译项目与你们相识乃至建立友谊,你们报价合理、服务细致、翻译质量可靠。请允许我们借此机会向你们表示衷心的感谢!”

    山东教育出版社

  • “很满意世联的翻译质量,交稿准时,中英互译都比较好,措辞和句式结构都比较地道,译文忠实于原文。TNC是一家国际环保组织,发给我们美国总部的同事后,他们反应也不错。”

    TNC大自然保护协会

  • “原英国首相布莱尔来访,需要非常专业的同声传译服务,因是第一次接触,心中仍有着一定的犹豫,但是贵司专业的译员与高水准的服务,给我们留下了非常深刻的印象。”

    北京师范大学壹基金公益研究院

  • “在与世联翻译合作期间,世联秉承着“上善若水、厚德载物”的文化理念,以上乘的品质和质量,信守对客户的承诺,出色地完成了我公司交予的翻译工作。”

    国科创新(北京)信息咨询中心

  • “由于项目要求时间相当紧凑,所以世联在保证质量的前提下,尽力按照时间完成任务。使我们在世博会俄罗斯馆日活动中准备充足,并受到一致好评。”

    北京华国之窗咨询有限公司

  • “贵公司针对客户需要,挑选优秀的译员承接项目,翻译过程客户随时查看中途稿,并且与客户沟通术语方面的知识,能够更准确的了解到客户的需求,确保稿件高质量。”

    日工建机(北京)国际进出口有限公司

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